NewsBundestag showdown: CDU leads as migration debate heats up

Bundestag showdown: CDU leads as migration debate heats up

Before Sunday's Bundestag elections, the Christian Democrats are maintaining a clear lead. The Left Party has gained slightly, according to the latest poll by the Forsa Institute. Support for other parties remains at a similar level.

Before the elections, the Christian Democrats maintain a clear lead.
Before the elections, the Christian Democrats maintain a clear lead.
Images source: © Getty Images | Kay Nietfeld, Michael Kappeler, Johannes Simon,
Malwina Gadawa

Compared to the survey conducted between February 4 and 10, right after the Bundestag votes on migration policy and the TV debate among major party candidates for chancellor, the ratings for the Christian Democrats (CDU/CSU) and the Left Party both rose by one percentage point, while support for the Greens dropped by the same amount.

The home stretch of the campaign in Germany

Despite minor shifts, support for the main German parties in the final phase of the campaign before the Bundestag elections remains stable.

The CDU/CSU Christian Democratic bloc remains in the lead with 30 percent of respondents planning to vote for them. The right-wing populist AfD is in second place (20 percent), followed by the Social Democratic SPD (16 percent) and the Greens (13 percent).

The Left Party would also enter the Bundestag (7 percent) along with the liberals from the Free Democratic Party (FDP; 5 percent). The left-wing populist Sahra Wagenknecht Alliance (BSW) is hovering around the electoral threshold at 4 percent.

The campaign leading up to the Bundestag elections, which will take place on Sunday, has entered the decisive phase. Migration policy has been its most important topic for some time.

Discussions became particularly heated after the attack in Munich, where on Thursday, a 24-year-old Afghan drove a car into a demonstration. A two-year-old girl and her 37-year-old mother died due to severe injuries. Investigators currently assume the crime had an Islamist motive.

A clash between Scholz and Merz during the Bundestag session

German Chancellor Olaf Scholz of the SPD and opposition CDU leader Friedrich Merz fiercely attacked each other during the last Bundestag session before the elections. The candidates for chancellor from the Social Democrats and the Christian Democrats argued over migration, economic policy, and how to approach the AfD.

Scholz accused Merz of threatening European integration with his migration plans.

- Friedrich Merz intends to bury Europe - said the chancellor. In his view, by doing so, Merz also undermines the "proud legacy" of former CDU chancellors: Konrad Adenauer, Helmut Kohl, and Angela Merkel.

According to Merz, the government is leaving a "sheer disaster" on the labour market - nearly 3 million unemployed, almost 400,000 more than at the beginning of Scholz's term. Furthermore, during this period, there have been 50,000 company insolvencies and a capital outflow of approximately 148 billion Canadian dollars a year. - Apparently, you no longer see the reality - shouted Merz towards Scholz, according to dpa reports.