The anti-MASA migration alternative for Germany (AFD) has exceeded a national survey for the first time in the history of the parties, as support to the incoming government continues to slide.
The German people have given their verdict on the new German government, a coalition agreed on Wednesday, before the position. As the ‘conservatives’ legacy leave their promises in the electoral time of border controls to get into bed with the left, surveys show that they fell once more.
In what is only the last worrying sign for the incoming government of the Chief of the Christian Democratic Union (CDU) Friedrich Merz, the latest Ipsos survey has found that the Union (CDU/CSU) has fallen below the AFD, which has become the most supported party in Germany for the first time since its foundation in 2013.
According to the Psos survey, 25 percent of the public now supports the populist party against Anti-Mass migration, a three-point increase over last month. On the contrary, the ‘conservative’ establishment union previously led by Merkel saw its support fall into five points during the last month to 24 percent.
Meanwhile, support for Social Democrats (SPD), which despite the historical loss of elections, will return to the government as a Junior coalition partner of the Union, is 15 percent, 16.8 percent won in Elyions in February.
Commenting on the results of the survey, in the co-leader Alice Weidel task: “For the first time in the brief history of the AFD, we are the strongest game in Germany. Thank you for its tremendous trust, the political change will come!”
Although it is now the most popular political party in the country and has ended in a strong second place in federal elections, the department continues to persist under the so -called “Firewall” health cordon, in which the establishment sets the parties.
The decision to keep the Firewall in place was taken by the leader of CDU and incoming chancellor, Friedrich Merz, who has chosen to form a government with the social democrats of the leftist establishment.
To do so, Merz has been forced to go back in the key promises that were made the election, such as abandoning its position as a fiscal conservative and discarding the constitutional limits of the government’s debt to finance a packet of billion expenses of euros in defense.
Perhaps more significantly, the head of CDU was also forced to make concessions to the leftist SPD on immigration, including border protections and naturalizations.
The negotiations of the Longhy coalition, which finally concluded on Wednesday, have not only seen support for the decline of the Union, but also clearly shaking public trust in Merz.
The NTV/RTL trend barometer posted this week found that only 32 percent think Merz will be a good chancellor, compared to 60 percent that has no faith in its ability. This represents a decrease of eight percent of the immediate consequences of the elections in March, when 40 percent, although it would be a good leader of the country.
If the incoming government does not comply with immigration and other areas, such as the hesitant economy, it can allow the department to take power in the 2029 elections.
The group of experts from the UE-US Forum forum commented: “After obtaining power, the CDU abandoned the promises that made them chosen. Now, the department will lead in Germany for the first time, and it is not a coincidence. People want their country to return.”