Germany’s Regional Elections: Impact on Federal Politics and Coalition Dynamics

The results of the regional state elections in Bavaria and Hesse are a clear blow to Chancellor Olaf Scholz’s federal government, with gains for the opposition conservatives but also the far-right AfD.
Sunday’s regional state elections were a kind of mid-term election for Chancellor Olaf Scholz and his federal government. About 9.4 million people were eligible to vote for the new state legislature in Bavaria and about 4.3 million in Hesse, more than 20% of the eligible voters in the entire country. During the last years, both states were led by the country’s main opposition party, the CDU in Hesse and its sister party, the Bavaria-only CSU.
Regional state elections in Germany are always affected by both regional and national developments and it’s hard to tell upfront which of the two will have a larger impact. This time around, however, it was clear that both state elections were regarded as voters' reactions to bigger national topics like the energy transition and immigration, but also political communication, as the work of the federal government has almost constantly been accompanied by controversial discussions in public by all three coalition partners.
The available results of both elections have the CDU coming in as the largest party, gaining significantly in Hesse and broadly remaining unchanged in Bavaria. The SPD and the Greens (both part of the federal government coalition) lost almost equal votes in Hesse and Bavaria. The third coalition partner in Berlin, the liberal FDP, continued the strongly negative trend since the last federal elections in 2021. It missed the threshold to enter parliament in Bavaria and just made it in Hesse with the smallest margin possible. The right-wing AfD recorded strong gains and will be the second-largest party in Hesse and third-largest in Bavaria.