The German establishment's playbook for dealing with populism is simple: you ignore the problem and hope it goes away.
So when a state leader from Angela Merkel's Christian Democrats threw in his lot with the far right this week, he met with opprobrium across the mainstream. Merkel called it "unforgivable." Her coalition partner said a "taboo" had been broken.
That much is clear.
But Mike Mohring, the CDU chief in Thuringia, might legitimately ask what else he was supposed to do. He's been fighting to keep the party relevant in the poorer east where many voters feel its center-right policies have failed them and resent the support Merkel has offered to a wave of refugees.
And he knows that the fundamental challenge isn't the nationalist Alternative for Germany, or AfD's local leader — a bona fide fascist according to a German court ruling — but that 260,000 voters decided to back him.
National party leader and Merkel heir Annegret Kramp-Karrenbauer may never recover from the humiliation, and it may well push more angry easterners into the arms of the anti-immigrant AfD.
That would leave the CDU no closer to tackling the real issue — the shadow of fascism in Germany.
— Ben Sills
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