At the time, Seehofer and Soeder’s move was part of what appeared to be a dual campaign strategy. They sharpened their rhetoric on immigration, with Seehofer going toe-to-toe with Merkel in Berlin and Soeder calling for a border police force back in Bavaria. The party also worked to bill itself as the sole protector of Bavarian “values,” passing a law requiring that a crucifix hang in every public building across the state. Because the AfD is a thorn in the CSU’s side “that just has completely spooked” the party, “Soeder and Seehofer figured they need to tack very hard to the right,” says Sudha David-Wilp, a senior transatlantic fellow at the German Marshall Fund in Berlin. “They pulled a dramatic move earlier this summer by threatening to basically dissolve the coalition.” The political alliance between the CSU and the Christian Democrats goes back to 1949. Ultimately Merkel was able to defuse the showdown by securing agreements with other European countries to work together on migration, a move that made Seehofer back down, as he deemed Merkel’s actions sufficient. But public opinion indicates that Bavaria’s voters are keen on punishing Seehofer, Soeder and their party as a whole—while Merkel, on the other hand, came out of the situation relatively unscathed, despite initial fears of a lasting impact on her chancellorship. One early August survey from German pollster Forsa found that Soeder is the least popular premier of all of Germany’s 16 federal states—64 percent of Bavarians disapproved of his government, while just 31 percent approved. And nationally, Seehofer’s approval rating has been nearly cut in half since the migration showdown. He had an approval rating of 47 percent in May, and 43 percent in June, just a few percentage points behind Merkel; by July, however, Seehofer’s approval rating had sunk to just 27 percent. Merkel, by contrast, had only fallen from 50 percent to 48 percent in the same polls. One survey, which asked respondents a question about the top problems facing their state, even found that more Bavarians—34 percent—saw Soeder and the CSU as the biggest problem than those—28 percent—who believed it was refugee issues. “It was an open question: ‘Please name the three most important problems we have,’” says Peter Matuschek, the chief political analyst at Forsa. “It was very clear to a lot of people that the showdown with Merkel wasn’t about the substance of the matter,” Dirsus says. “What they were discussing concerned very few people, and in the end they provoked a fight for the sake of provoking a fight.” As campaign season begins in earnest in Bavaria, it’s difficult to tell whether the CSU will change course. The party has unveiled its slogan, “Soeder Macht’s”—“Soeder Does It”—which seems to be geared toward highlighting his leadership and record in office rather than the law-and-order issues he and the party were trumpeting just months ago. But as the AfD will almost certainly remain fixated on immigration between now and mid-October, the CSU faces a choice about the best electoral path forward—and its decision will serve as an example for other parties facing similar far-right challenges across Europe. Emily Schultheis is a freelance journalist based in Berlin, where she primarily covers elections and the rise of populism. Her reporting has appeared in The Atlantic, Foreign Policy and Politico, among other publications.The upcoming elections in Bavaria offer an important test case for European center-right parties looking to combat the far right.
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