In the election, the left slipped from a good nine to just under five percent – a disaster for the party leadership. How can it go on now?
A week after the severe defeat in the federal election, the party leadership of the Left began to come to terms with it.
The party executive met in Berlin on Saturday for two-day deliberations. At the beginning there was a very serious, clear and thoughtful debate, said the co-chairs Janine Wissler and Susanne Hennig-Wellsow. Wissler called the election result a disaster. The members of the 44-strong party executive met in a Berlin hotel for the first time since their online election at the end of February.
According to Hennig-Wellsow, the party leadership is now planning talks with the state chairmen of the Left and conferences with the grassroots to “hear the voices of the members” to analyze the causes. On the question of whether there would be personnel consequences at the top, Wissler said that the current party executive was only elected relatively shortly before the general election. It is now a matter of discussing changes “in terms of political content”.
Sense of responsibility
She was optimistic that the defeat could strengthen cohesion on the left. “Last Sunday we all looked deep into the abyss together.” That is why she is “quite confident” that there is a sense of responsibility everywhere in the party and that it is now a matter of standing together.
The left had slipped from 9.2 to 4.9 percent in the election. It was only thanks to three direct mandates that she did not fail at the five percent hurdle. The parliamentary group shrank from 69 to 39 MPs as a result of the poor result. Since election night there has been a controversial debate within the party about the causes. The party leaders said that there were more than 1,000 new members of the left in the past week as a ray of hope.

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