Berlin: Wegner fails in the second round in the mayoral election

A voice was missing
CDU politician Wegner also fails in the second round in the mayoral election in Berlin

Kai Wegner in the Berlin House of Representatives

© Tobias SCHWARZ / AFP

Setback for the Berlin CDU and its chairman Kai Wegner: The 50-year-old also missed the absolute majority required for the election of the governing mayor in the second ballot.

The CDU politician Kai Wegner failed in the election for the new Governing Mayor of Berlin in the second ballot. The 50-year-old missed the absolute majority required to be elected as the successor to Franziska Giffey in the Berlin House of Representatives on Thursday. Wegner got 71 yes votes in the first round, 86 deputies voted against him. In the second ballot, he also needed the absolute majority of the 159 parliamentarians, i.e. 80 yes votes, but only received 79.

The CDU has 52 MPs in the new House of Representatives, the SPD 34. Together, the coalition has 86 votes and the opposition from the Greens, Left and AfD has 73.

Further choices are now possible. A majority of the votes cast would then be sufficient for an election.

CDU strongest force after repeat elections in Berlin in February

Wegner had promoted the formation of a black-red coalition in recent weeks. He would be the first governing mayor from the ranks of the CDU after Eberhard Diepgen, who held this office until June 2001. The new coalition of the CDU and SPD is intended to replace the alliance of SPD, Left and Greens that had governed Berlin since 2016.

Unlike the SPD, there had been no public discussions about the black-red alliance among the Berlin Christian Democrats. At a CDU party conference, the coalition agreement passed without a dissenting vote, while the SPD’s approval in a member vote was significantly lower at 54.3 percent. The previous head of government Giffey is to get the post of economics senator in the new Senate.

The CDU emerged as the strongest party from the repeat elections in February, relegating the SPD and the Greens to their places. Giffey was then ready to give up her post for the Black-Red coalition, which she would have kept if Red-Green-Red had continued. The vote in February had become necessary because there had been numerous organizational breakdowns in the regular parliamentary elections in autumn 2021.

Note: This article has been updated and supplemented.

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DPA

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