The AfD loses a few days before the federal election in the polls. The AfD comes in a survey by the Insa Institute on 21 percent (-1 in comparison to Monday), as reported by the “Bild” (Thursday edition).
The Left Party can thus hope for seven percent of the votes in the federal election on Sunday, which is half a point more than at the beginning of the week. The FDP loses half a point and now comes in at four percent, which means it would not clear the five percent hurdle.
All other parties hold their values from the beginning of the week: the Union makes it on 30 percent, the SPD on 15 percent, the Greens on 13 percent and the BSW on 5 percent.
As a result, only a two-party coalition of the Union and AfD, which the Union’s chancellor candidate Friedrich Merz (CDU) excludes, would have a majority. In all further, mathematically possible coalitions without AfD, the Union would need two coalition partners.
A total of 2,502 people were surveyed on February 18 and 19 for the poll.