
AfD Hits Record 27%, New German Poll Finds
According to the latest YouGov survey, support for the country’s traditional parties has remained roughly the same compared to last month.

According to the latest YouGov survey, support for the country’s traditional parties has remained roughly the same compared to last month.

German voters now see the right-wing party as more competent on migration than any of its rivals.

The nomination of a Constitutional Court judge who stated a child does not have human dignity before birth has reignited the abortion debate.

The German government will give billions of euros to NGOs that are “against the Right.”

A small group of party leaders gathered on Tuesday night to discuss apparent mistakes and unfavorable polls.

The latest research shows both pessimism and a potential swing to the right, but with plenty of undecided votes up for grabs—and many individual political reputations in decline.

The Alternative für Deutschland party’s support has risen to 25% according to a survey by INSA.

CDU-CSU politicians have also criticised Berlin’s fast-track approach.

Either option—electing judges with a simple majority or eliminating the plenary vote altogether—would open the door for abortion liberalization and experimenting with AfD bans.

An accusation that a left-wing candidate plagiarised her doctoral dissertation pushed the Union to take the vote off the agenda.