Sunday question
BSW reaches the five percent mark-majority with Merz satisfied
Copy the current link
Add to the memorial list
Little is currently happening in surveys on voters’ approval for the parties in the German Bundestag. A party and a politician can still be happy.
The Berlin coalition parties are currently hardly moving in voters. According to a survey by the Institute Insa on behalf of the “Bild am Sonntag”, the Union from the CDU and CSU is currently coming to 28 percent of the votes. The SPD is still 16 percent.
There is currently little movement for the opposition parties-with one exception: after its failure in the Bundestag election, the alliance Sahra Wagenknecht (BSW) would now overcome the five percent hurdle. The party climbed up one percentage point in the “Sunday trend”. The party last reached this value in April.
Majority of Germans satisfied with the work of Friedrich Merz
According to Insa, Bündnis 90/The Greens currently come to eleven, the left to nine and the FDP to three percent. Most voices would win the AfD right -wing extremist right -wing extremist. According to the Insa, it comes 24 percent, other surveys currently have around one percentage point less.
Chancellor Friedrich Merz (CDU) told the “Süddeutsche Zeitung”: “During the last legislative period, the AfD has doubled. If we can at least reverse the trend and ensure that the political parties will become stronger again in the middle if the CDU, CSU and SPD together are stable in the surveys, then the stage of this election period can be achieved.”
Incidentally, around 57 percent of Germans are satisfied with the work of the Chancellor. This was the result of the recent “Politbarometer” of the research group elections on behalf of ZDF. In the popularity scale, Merz is now in fourth place, behind Boris Pistorius, Lars Klingbeil (both SPD) and Johann WadePhul (CDU).
Insa asked 1202 citizens from June 23 to June 27th: “If the Bundestag election were on the coming Sunday, how would you vote?” According to the information, the maximum fault tolerance is plus/minus 2.9 percentage points. For the “political barometer”, the Mannheim research group surveyed elections from June 24th to 26th, 1378 randomly selected voters. The error range is three percentage points with a share value of 40 percent plus/minus and a share value of ten percent plus/minus two percentage points.
FD / AFP, dpa
Source: Stern