News
9 April
2025
https://brusselssignal.eu/2025/04/right-wing-afd-party-tops-german-poll-for-first-time-ever/
Right-wing
AfD party tops German poll for first time ever
Chris
Gattringer
Barely
six weeks after the German federal elections, the right-wing Alternative for
Germany (AfD) has topped a voter survey for the first time ever.
On April
9, Ipsos published the results of its latest survey that revealed a quarter of
the German electorate would now cast their vote for the AfD. The Conservative
Christian Democratic Union (CDU), which won the February 28 elections with 29
per cent of the vote, was down to 24 per cent.
That
followed the criticised performance of CDU leader Friedrich Merz in the
coalition talks with the left-wing Social Democratic Party (SPD).
SPD was
stable in the polls with 15 per cent support, about the same level it won at
the election.
Sonntagsfrage
Ipsos zur Bundestagswahl • AfD 25 % | CDU/CSU 24 % | SPD 15 % | GRÜNE 11 % |
DIE LINKE 11 % | BSW 5 % | FDP 4 % | Sonstige 5 %
➤ Übersicht: https://t.co/Gzilw3J3L9
➤ Verlauf Ipsos:
https://t.co/jelulA5bur pic.twitter.com/Lqy5xdgnAv
—
Wahlrecht.de (@Wahlrecht_de) April 9, 2025
Merz had
previously ruled out any co-operation with AfD even though many of his election
promises – primarily to curb illegal immigration and migrant crime – were
similar to the right-wing programme.
That made
Merz vulnerable to excessive demands from the SDP, to which in the eyes of many
Conservatives he did not put up enough resistance.
Recently,
Merz has also come under increasing fire from within his own party. “We fought
for you, but for what?,” members of the CDU party’s youth wing wrote in an open
letter dated April 6.
The Ipsos
surveying service dated back to 2016, based on an online panel of at least
1,000 respondents.
The
pollsters correctly predicted the result of the February election, including
the 21 per cent share for the AfD. In the last survey before the current one,
published on March 7, CDU still scored 29 per cent and the AfD 22 per cent.
The
latest poll also showed rising support for the hard-left Die Linke party, the
successor to the former East German Communist party. Die Linke was up from 9
per cent at the ballot box to 11 per cent in the Ipsos survey.
The
results were particularly damning for Merz as CDU leader.
When he
first ran for the party leadership in 2018 – unsuccessfully – he said the party
could “again reach up to 40 per cent of the vote and halve AfD”.
The voter
dynamic is now moving in the opposite direction.
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