The victory for Germany’s conservative opposition in Sunday’s election was the latest example of the “Trump effect internationally,” according to Ned Ryun, the founder and CEO of American Majority.
“I think you’re really seeing is many people waking up and realizing how immoral their leaders are. The moral imperative of every national leader is to prioritize, protect and advance his or her people and nation’s interests on every issue,” Ryun told Fox News Digital. “To not do that, in fact to sell out your people via terrible trade deals or terrible immigration policy, is deeply immoral.”
The comments come after Friedrich Merz of Germany’s center-right Christian Democratic Union (CDU) won the country’s national election Sunday, ousting incumbent Chancellor Olaf Scholz of the center-left Social Democratic Party (SPD).
The election also saw the rise of Germany’s right-wing Alternative for Germany (AfD) party, which finished second in the voting, according to exit polls.
Some of that could change in the future, Ryun stressed, noting that the right-wing AfD party is likely to get locked out of Germany’s coalition government, despite finishing second in Sunday’s election, though the party’s continued momentum could see it make its way into the majority by Germany’s next election.
The largest issue in that election, Ryun believes, will still be immigration.
“I think AfD will be completely shut out, but I think in the next election it could even become the majority party in Germany,” Ryun said. “The reason I think AfD will see future success is that Merz and the CDU have already made it abundantly clear that they’ve no intention of shutting the borders down.”
Michael Lee is a writer for Fox News. Prior to joining Fox News, Michael worked for the Washington Examiner, Bongino.com, and Unbiased America. He has covered politics for more than eight years.
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