Now it is clear: The SPD will go into the next federal election campaign with Olaf Scholz. If you look at the poll numbers, this can only end in a crushing defeat - or does "still-Chancellor" Scholz actually have a chance to turn the tide? Party leaders Saskia Esken and Lars Klingbeil have not managed to end the leadership crisis quickly. How do they now want to convince the base to campaign for Olaf Scholz? First, the traffic light coalition was paralyzed for weeks by internal disputes, then a dispute raged over who was responsible for the traffic light coalition's end - Scholz or Christian Lindner - and finally the dispute in the SPD over the right candidate for chancellor. How long can the parties afford to continue this navel-gazing without voters turning away from the democratic center? The problems in the country are massive: the war in Ukraine, migration, crisis in the social security systems, recession, etc. Who has the better solutions: the Merz CDU or the Scholz SPD? Discussing: Marina Kormbaki, DER SPIEGEL Anna Lehmann, taz.die tageszeitung Gordon Repinski, POLITICO Thomas Sigmund, Handelsblatt Moderation: Ellen Ehni More information about the program: https://www1.wdr.de/daserste/pressecl... All current information and tagesschau24 in the livestream: https://www.tagesschau.de/ All programs, livestreams, documentaries and reports also in the ARD media library: https://www.ardmediathek.de/tagesschau