Angela Merkel is all but certain to win a fourth term in power in German elections today, unless the polls have got it spectacularly wrong.
But if she does remain Chancellor, it will be at the helm of a Germany that is deeply divided.
In Weimar, you can see the crack that runs through German society. Two of Germany's greatest writers, Goethe and Schiller, lived here. So did the composer J S Bach. The city was also where the ill-fated Weimar Republic of the inter-war years was proclaimed. If any city can claim to be the epicentre of German culture, it is Weimar.
But while Merkel enjoys some of the highest personal approval ratings in Europe, Weimar is seething with discontent. "It's the refugees," a flower seller in the market square who gives his name only as Harry says. "She brought all these people in and now we'll never get rid of them."
Weimar and the surrounding state of Thuringia lie in the heartlands of the anti-immigrant Alternative for Germany party (AfD). In third place nationally, with around 13 per cent support, the AfD is second here with around 18 per cent.