Bundestag election: This is how you can have a say on election evening

Bundestag election: This is how you can have a say on election evening

Bundestag election

With these eight texts you can have a say on election evening






This election campaign was short and quite painful for some. Do you still have an overview of what was really important? No? Then you are right here.

If one has taught us the past few weeks, it is: an election campaign does not have to be long to take on. The time between the dissolution of the Bundestag at the end of December and the Bundestag election on this Sunday was short but intense. And because you can lose track of four chancellor candidates, 29 parties on the ballot paper and countless opinion polls, we have the most important ones for you at this point star-Texte collected for election. Click through the selection if you want to have a say (really) on Sunday evening – or maybe just don’t even know where you put your cross.

Only five minutes?

CDU Chancellor candidate Friedrich Merz has given up a shadow cabinet. The star knows who lurks to a government office in the Union – and who would really have chances.

CDU cabinet


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Chancellor – and then? Who could become a minister under Merz

Last-minute decision-making aid

Your biggest wish for the Bundestag election is a government that is less arguing? Do you want to annoy Markus Söder? Prevent the Greens? Politician editor Lisa Becke wrote down what you have to do for it.

Behind the scenes

  • Warnings, chaos, delicate SMS: the star has reconstructed how Friedrich Merz pushed his party into a new AfD course. About a maneuver that the CDU shakes at its core.

    “And then the hat cord burst”

  • Alice Weidel wants to lead the AfD to power in Germany. How she made it to the top in her party and what tactics she used to tame forces like Björn Höcke.

    Your plan

  • Mix in, ward off, journalists scold: the star Get an insight into the internal communication of the closest confidants of Chancellor Olaf Scholz. The story of a control compulsion.

    The Scholz system

How was that again?

Before the election campaign, the traffic light broken-orchestrated by FDP boss Christian Lindner. He plunged the government into chaos in November, it broke spectacularly. The star-Politics heads Veit Medick and Jan Rosenkranz about a man for whom everything has been concerned.

Christian Lindner looks into a camera

Christian Lindner


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The traffic lights

The biggest surprise

After the departure of Sahra Wagenknecht, the left seemed done. Suddenly, however, the party looks young and upward again. Is there a surprise? Martin Debes and Miriam Hollstein on the wrong political history of the year.

For the small talk in front of the television

At some point, if the analysis loyalty on the sofa walks down and the commentators on TV only repeat themselves, then the time for (useless) knowledge has come. For this moment, Annette Berger has put together this overview: the German Chancellor – and her nasty nicknames. Have fun clicking through!

SAS

Source: Stern

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