THE GERMAN ELECTIONS.
SOCIALIST SUCCESSES.
Press Association. Electr c Telegraph Gopyripl t. Received June 19, 10.15 a.m. Berlin, June 18. The chief issue of the German elec tions is the future customs policy.
Leaders of the iron, eleotric, c >tton, and wool industries, hoping to delay the realisation of Mr Chamberlain's policy, are striving to return nonprotectionist candidates. There will be 180 second ballots, compared with 98 in the elections of 1898. Social Democrats secure 55 seats at the first ballots, compared with 32 in 1898. This success is at the expense of the Radicals, and is attributed to the tariff issue and the Kaiser's interference with parties. The Freisinnigo, or Radical Party, is almost annihilated. Saxony voted solidly "red," which Is attributed to the effects of the Royal scandal. The Socialist vote at Essen numbered 22,000, compared with 4440 last election ; Duisburg 25,000, compared with 7900; Bochum 40,000, compared with 22,000; Berlin 100,000 above the vote of 1898; Saxony 100,000 above all other parties combined. Many thousand voters who are not Socialists supported the Socialist?, as representing the Empire's one effective party of opposition.
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Bibliographic details
Marlborough Express, Volume XXXVII, Issue 142, 19 June 1903, Page 3
Word Count
185THE GERMAN ELECTIONS. Marlborough Express, Volume XXXVII, Issue 142, 19 June 1903, Page 3
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