The German Court refused to vote requested by the populist BSW Party
The German Constitutional Court refused to order a re -counting of the parliamentary elections last month, and it was insufficient for the newly -starting populist Sahara Wagenknecht Alliance (BSW) party to win a seat in Bundestag.
The court announced its decision on Thursday evening.
“As before the election, legal protection is possible to a limited extent before the last election is determined.” He said.
The official final result of the national elections will be announced by the Federal Election Committee on Friday. Objections can be brought to the agenda and if necessary, legal action can be made after this result is announced.
A BSW spokesman approved the party’s legal file on Tuesday. The party had made various movements that demanded that the official final result be determined only after a full -regeneration.
The official preliminary results of Germany’s February 23 elections put BSW in 4,972% of the votes, the parties are normally below the 5% to demand the seats in the Federal, the lower house of the German Parliament.
Since then, individual local narratives in various places have shown that some votes were seen wrong. However, these re -counts have not led to a significant change in the results.
For BSW, which was founded only at the beginning of 2024, to enter the Federal will be extremely political.
As a result, if he would have found a way for Parliament, the seats would have to be redistributed. A coalition of two parties, the Central-Right CDU/CSU block and the Central Left SPD Party may no longer be the majority.