Alternative GDR election outcome

In December 1989 Gregor Gysi replaced the old guard of the former SED party. He was able democratize the SED. The party remained itself and became the PDS (Party of Democratic socialism. The new elections we're held in March. The PDS had Good changes because they still had access to former SED resources and institutions. IOTL the CDU (conservatives) won the elections, but what if the PDS archived a majority? Would Germany still unify? Or would it be a different unification?
 
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In december 1989 Gregor Gysi replaced the old guard of the former SED party. He was able democratize the SED. The party renaimed itself and became the PDS (Party of Democratic socialism. The new elections we're held in March. The PSD had Good changes because they still had acces to former SED resources and institutions. IOTL the CDU (conservatives) won the elections, but what if the PDS archieved a majority? Would Germany still unity? Or would it be a different unification?
No way.
A transition from dictatorial "communism" to a parliamentary system led by reformed communists sailing under the flag of social democracy or the like, as it happened in Romania, Bulgaria, or Hungary, was not a plausible outcome in the GDR, where the promise of quick and full integration in the Golden West had much more traction and potential. Let's not forget how many GDR citizens still migrated to the West in the early months of 1990. You couldn't stop that herrmorhage with the promise of a "soft, humane transition"...
 
The PDS was just too compromised by its past--and by its opposition to reunification, which East Germans increasingly saw as the only way out of their bad economic situation--to have any chance of winning the 1990 elections. At best, it might have narrowly defeated the SPD for second place. (OTL results: CDU-dominated Alliance for Germany 48.0%, SPD 21.9% , PDS, 16.4%, Free Democrats 5.3%, etc. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1990_East_German_general_election)
 
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