Germany’s opposition Left Party to dissolve caucus after prominent member launches rival venture

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Dietmar Bartsch, parliamentary group leader of Die Linke, Left Party, speaks during a press statement before the start of the parliamentary group meeting of Die Linke in the Bundestag in Berlin, Germany, Tuesday Nov. 14, 2023. Germany’s opposition Left Party said Tuesday that it will dissolve its parliamentary caucus next month after Sahra Wagenknecht, long one of its most prominent figures, broke away to found a new party with a more nationalist, migration-skeptic agenda. (Michael Kappeler/dpa via AP)

BERLIN (AP) — Germany’s opposition Left Party said Tuesday it will dissolve its parliamentary caucus next month after prominent party member Sahra Wagenknecht broke away to found a new party with a more nationalist, migration-skeptic agenda.

The Left Party emerged in 2005, bringing together ex-communists from eastern Germany with leftists from the west disgruntled by welfare-state cuts. It was a potent opposition force in its early years, but was later plagued by deep internal divisions.

In Germany’s 2021 election, it won only 4.9% of the vote and came close to losing almost all its seats in parliament. Its fortunes haven’t improved since, despite the unpopularity of center-left Chancellor Olaf Scholz’s government.

Wagenknecht and nine other lawmakers quit the Left Party last month. They plan to formally launch a new party in January.

Wagenknecht criticizes “unregulated immigration” and some environmentalists’ plans to combat climate change, positions that contrast with those of the Left Party leadership. She also opposes current sanctions against Russia. It’s a combination that some observers think could take votes away from the far-right Alternative for Germany, which has surged to around 20% in national polls.

Wagenknecht and her followers quit the party but didn’t immediately leave its caucus. They rejected calls to give up their seats so that Left Party loyalists could take their place.

Party leaders conceded that there was no chance of salvaging the caucus, which requires a minimum 37 members. It will be dissolved on Dec. 6, lawmakers said after they met Tuesday.

“Better united with 28 than estranged with 38” lawmakers, caucus leader Dietmar Bartsch said. He stressed that it was not the end of the party, which has one state governor and is part of two other regional administrations, and said that “this is an opportunity for a new beginning ... (but) permanent disputes must end.”

Bartsch hopes for a new Left Party “group” that would have reduced funding and rights, but seats on committees and more time to speak than independents. The caucus received about 11.5 million euros ($12.3 million) in state funding last year and spent 9.3 million euros on personnel costs.

Dissolving the caucus means that its 108 staff will have to be dismissed.