德国反移民选择党在年终民意调查中飙升至新高
Germany's Anti-Immigration AfD Party Soars To New High In Year-End Poll

原始链接: https://www.zerohedge.com/political/germanys-anti-immigration-afd-party-soars-new-high-year-end-poll

最近的调查显示,在德国,反移民政党德国另类选择党 (AfD) 的支持率已飙升至迄今为止的最高点,根据 RTL/ntv 趋势晴雨表委托 Forsa 于 2023 年 12 月初进行的民意调查,支持率达到了惊人的 23%。 与一周前的 22% 相比,增幅显着。 与此同时,基督教民主联盟 (CDU/CSU) 仍然是领先的政治团体,占 31%,这表明如果德国目前举行选举,这两党之间确实有可能结盟。 然而,德国选择党的这种上升轨迹可能会带来负面影响,只有 19% 的德国人认为联邦层面的政治家能够理解日常生活中的担忧。 在考虑假设的内阁阵容时,24% 的人支持弗里德里希·梅尔茨 (Friedrich Merz) 担任总理,而奥拉夫·肖尔茨 (Olaf Scholz) 则支持 15%。 另一位可能的总理职位竞争者安娜莱娜·贝尔博克 (Annalena Baerbock) 获得了 17% 的支持率。 值得注意的是,没有提及德国选择党总理候选人领导人爱丽丝·韦德尔。

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原文

Authored by Denes Albert via ReMix News,

Germany’s Alternative for Germany (AfD) party has reached 23 percent in a new Forsa poll, marking the highest poll result the party has ever reached for a Forsa poll at the national level.

AfD co-chair Alice Weidel. (afd.de)

The poll, conducted for RTL/ntv’s trend barometer, shows the AfD has gained one point compared to last week, while the Christian Democrats (CDU/CSU) remain the top party in Germany, standing at 31 percent.

Combined, the AfD and CDU/CSU could easily form a coalition government if elections were held now.

At the same time, the poll shows the dire state of the ruling coalition, with the Social Democrats (SPD) at 14 percent, the Greens at 13 percent, and FDP at 5 percent. The Left party (Die Linke) lost one point, falling to 3 percent.

The RTL/ntv trend barometer shows a number of hypothetical options for chancellor, with 15 percent choosing Olaf Scholz, 24 percent Friedrich Merz, and 18 percent Robert Habeck.

In another potential configuration involving Scholz, Merz and Annalena Baerbock, Scholz comes in at 19 percent, Merz at 27 percent, and Baerbock is at 17 percent.

The AfD’s plan to run Alice Weidel in the chancellor position is not reflected as an option in the poll.

The poll also asked whether respondents had the impression that politicians at the federal level understand what “moves” people in their everyday lives, to which 81 percent of Germans answered in the negative.

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