Christian Social Union of Bavaria | |
---|---|
Party leader | Markus Söder |
Parliamentary leader | Ralph Brinkhaus |
Founded | 1948 |
Headquarters | |
Political ideology | Christian democracy |
Political position | Center-right |
International affiliation | International Democrat Union and European People’s Party |
Color(s) | blue and black |
Website | csu.de |
The Christian Social Union in Bavaria (in German: Christlich-Soziale Union in Bayern, or CSU) is a Christian democratic and conservative political party in Germany. It only runs for elections in the state of Bavaria as part of a long-standing agreement with its sister party, the Christian Democratic Union (CDU) (in turn, the CDU does not field candidates in Bavaria).
The CSU is considered to be more conservative than the CDU. However it is also more left than the CDU on social welfare issues.[1]
The CSU was highly critical on Angela Merkel's refugee policies during the European migrant crisis. The former party leader Horst Seehofer said in an interview that Germany had been "shaped by Christianity", and that the country should not give up its own traditions. Furthermore, he stated that Islam "does not belong in Germany".[2] However, some conservative critics have described the party's leader, Horst Seehofer as "a centre-right figure fundamentally unopposed to mass migration,"[3] and the party strongly opposes the conservative Alternative for Germany, the only German party that takes a tough stance on migration, falsely labeling it "extremist."[4] The CSU is not a consistently conservative party – it has explicitly refused to work with consistently conservative, nationalist parties like the FPÖ on the European level.[5]
In April 2018 the CSU ordered Christian Crosses to be Displayed on All Entrances to Government Buildings in Bavaria.[6]
Since its foundation shortly after World War II, the CSU has formed a tight partnership with its sister party, the CDU: the CDU does not field candidates in Bavaria and, in turn, the CSU does not field candidates outside it. Compared to the larger CDU, the CSU is considered more socially conservative and closer to the Catholic church. In 1980 and 2002, the CSU ran candidates for the German chancellorship on a joint ticket with the CDU (Franz Josef Strauss in 1980 and Edmund Stoiber in 2002). The CSU is the largest party in the state of Bavaria by a substantial margin, and has ruled the state since 1953, usually with an absolute majority. Its chairman is Markus Söder.
In the 2018 Bavarian elections, the CSU, allied with Merkel's liberal CDU, performed poorly, while the left-wing Green Party and the conservative Alternative for Germany performed well.[7]
Categories: [Christian Social Union of Bavaria]