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Left Party leader apologizes after calling CDU "fascist," faces resignation calls
Left Party elects new leaders amid divisions: Pantisano wins narrow mandate
New Left Party leader Luigi Pantisano apologised on Monday for calling CDU policy “fascist” and equating it with the AfD, a statement that triggered immediate calls for his resignation from the Union parties. Speaking to *Handelsblatt* , Pantisano said his wording had been “shortened and wrong in this form.” The apology came after CSU chairman Markus Huber and CDU leader Friedrich Merz both demanded he step down, with Merz also signalling openness to amending Germany’s defamation laws to deter similar rhetoric .
The controversy erupted on Sunday when Pantisano, elected Left Party chair only days earlier, told *Zeit* that CDU policy had become “fascist” and aligned with the AfD . The statement was swiftly condemned across the political spectrum. In a live blog, *Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung* reported that Central Council of Jews president Josef Schuster accused the Left Party of “furthering antisemitism” through its stance on the Middle East conflict, while Jewish organisations declared the party “un-electable for Jews” .
By Monday morning, the Union parties had hardened their line. CSU leader Huber explicitly joined Merz’s call for Pantisano’s resignation, while CDU general secretary Carsten Linnemann told *Süddeutsche Zeitung* that the episode showed the Left Party’s “fundamental inability to govern” . The Left Party’s co-chairs attempted to distance themselves from Pantisano’s remarks, but the damage to the party’s credibility had already been done. Central Council president Schuster told *taz* that the Left Party had “lost all credibility” over its Middle East policy, a separate but equally damaging controversy that has dogged the party since its federal conference last month .
Pantisano’s apology appears unlikely to quell the storm. In Berlin, CDU parliamentary group leader Carsten Müller told *Handelsblatt* that the Left Party now faces a “crisis of leadership and substance,” while the AfD seized on the remarks to accuse the Union of hypocrisy for tolerating comparisons to fascism within its own ranks . With the Left Party polling at historic lows and internal divisions deepening, the episode risks accelerating the party’s decline ahead of next year’s state elections in Saxony, Thuringia and Berlin.