URNA foot surveys confirm AFD’s rise, although traditional parties may form coalition

URNA foot surveys published after the legislative elections held this Sunday in Germany confirm that the alternative ultra -right party for Germany (AFD) has achieved 19.5 percent vote in which it would be their best historical result, although traditional parties , led by the Democristian Union (CDU) would have enough support to form a coalition government.

Specifically, the CDU directed Friedrich Merz, has achieved 29 percent of votes by adding the Christian Social Union (CSU) Bavara, according to the urn foot survey published by German public television Ard. This figure is divided by 22.5 percent of the CDU and 6.5 percent of its Bávaro Brother Party.

In second position, AFD is located, followed by the Social Democratic Party (SPD) of the outgoing Chancellor, Olaf Scholz, which obtains a 16 percent support after a 9.2 points fall with respect to the 2021 elections.

Behind are the greens (13.5 percent), who pay their participation in the coalition government with a fall of 2.7 points. The left obtains a good result (8.5 percent), while the Democratic Liberal Party (FDP) sinks 6.4 points, up to 4.9 percent, and the Sahra Wagenknecht alliance (4.7 percent) It would be below the minimum 5 percent established by the German electoral legislation to obtain a list, always according to the survey.

With these data, CDU/CSU would be the formation with more representation in the German Parliament with 211 seats, followed by AFD (142), SPD (116), Los Verdes (98) and the left (62) and the Association of Voters of the voters of the South Schleswig with a seat.

The ZDF television staff survey of similar results, with CDU/CSU to the head (28.5 percent), followed by AFD (20 percent), SPD (16.5 percent), the greens ( 12 percent), the left (9 percent), and BSW and FDP tied with 5 percent.

The participation figure is definitive, which is located in a historic 84 percent, according to official data of the electoral authorities.

By Editor