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Well-known MP Sahra Wagenknecht has announced plans for a new party that could shift the fragile balance of German politics
Sahra Wagenknecht is a 54-year-old politician who, until recently, was a member of the struggling leftwing party Die Linke. She is also a household name in Germany. A figure with undeniable charisma, she's a stalwart on television talkshows, where her ability to present sometimes radical opinions as though they were common sense makes for lively discussions and entertaining viewing. Now, with the launch of her own party - named after herself - Germans may soon get the chance to vote for her too. Does she stand a chance - and what does the fanfare about the Sahra Wagenknecht Alliance (BSW) tell us about the direction of German politics?
In part, at least, people pay attention to Wagenknecht because she's long had a penchant for radical positions. When she first came of political age, even Die Linke was concerned that she was a Stalin apologist. But Wagenknecht's politics have changed with age. Her communism has been tempered by some expressions of admiration for the free market. She's also become increasingly critical of immigration, Germany's Covid-19 policies, sanctions on Russia, climate protesters and lifestyle leftists", as Wagenknecht dubs many advocates for racial and gender equality. Unsurprisingly, Die Linke hardly seems sorry to see her go: It's like with the grandmother who has cancer," Dietmar Bartsch, co-chair of the party's parliamentary committee, told Der Tagesspiegel. You know she's going to die, but you're still sad when the time comes."
Peter Kuras is a writer and translator based in Berlin
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