The Alternative for Germany (AfD) has hit a historic watermark, and is now the most popular party in Germany for the first time ever, reaching 26 percent. The poll, from Forsa, shows the Christian Democratic Union (CDU) in second place with 25 percent.
If the vote were held today, the two parties set to enter government, the Social Democrats (SPD) and the CDU, would not have enough votes to enter government. The SPD is at 15 percent, giving the two parties a combined total of 40 percent. The poll showed that support for the Greens dropped a point to 11 percent and the Left Party also dropped a point to 9 percent.
BREAKING: đ©đȘThe AfD party is now the most popular party in Germany for the first time ever, soaring to 26%.
The main German parties are working to ban the AfD, and a vote on a ban is expected in the coming months in the new Bundestag.
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â Remix News & Views (@RMXnews) April 22, 2025
The news comes at a time when the left is racing to vote on a ban on the AfD in the German parliament, the Bundestag, a topic covered in detail by Remix News. However, despite inital reports that the CDU would back such a ban, the picture is becoming muddier.
For one, there are more and more voices in the CDU and its sister party, the CSU, who are calling for âmore calmâ towards the AfD, including from the influential vice-chairman of the CDU/CSU parliamentary group, Jens Spahn. Spahn even said that the AfD should be able to lead some of the committee in the Bundestag, which would give the party more say and power. Given that it received the second-most votes during the German election, it should, like all other parties, have access to these committees, but many want to shut it out completely, especially from intelligence committees.
The issue could lead to a major split in the coalition between the CDU and SPD. SPD Bundestag member Ralf Stegner told Welt his party has âabsolutely no sense of humorâ on any attempt to go easy on the AfD.
đ©đȘđš “Germany needs the AfD”
Young women are increasingly promoting the AfD party on TikTok.
Many of them feel increasingly unsafe in Germany, and they believe AfD is the answer. pic.twitter.com/iXemPYBV0c
â Remix News & Views (@RMXnews) February 16, 2025
He said any kind of rapprochement would represent a âmaximum stress testâ for the new coalition govenrment.
âAnyone who wants to form a coalition with the SPD cannot join forces with right-wing radicals. And joining forces also means voting for enemies of democracy,â he said. The MP, known for his left-wing views, instead is calling for a ban on the AfD if the Federal Office for the Protection of the Constitution (BfV) classifies the party as âconfirmed right-wing extremist.â
âIf the Office for the Protection of the Constitution upgrades its classification, then we also have a duty to work towards initiating a ban on the party,â Stegner said.
đ©đȘâŒïž Young German woman explains why voters are turning to the AfD
“Iâm afraid to travel by train, afraid to go into town, afraid to do anything in public. And they talk about people being afraid of the AfD. The AfD has done nothing to anyone, unlike other people.” pic.twitter.com/hYlQVKXb1Q
â Remix News & Views (@RMXnews) February 10, 2025
However, Welt reports that CDU is rejecting an âautomoaticâ approach to banning the AfD.
The CDU/CSU, in turn, rejects this automatic approach: âTo derive an obligation to initiate ban proceedings from an upgrade by the Federal Office for the Protection of the Constitution clearly ignores the legal situation,â said GĂŒnter Krings, legal policy spokesman for the CDU-CSU parliamentary group. He instead wants to âfight the AfD politically by exposing its extremismâŠThe best recipe against the AfD is concrete successes by the new federal government, especially in migration, security, and the economy.â
đ©đȘ AfD’s Alice Weidel backs mass deportations in party conference speech.
“I have to tell you quite honestly that if this must be called remigration, then let it be called remigration.” pic.twitter.com/lyB8aOBCv6
â Remix News & Views (@RMXnews) January 13, 2025
He also claims that initiating proceedings âwould only make the AfD rub its hands together and use it as free support for its victim myth.â
Meanwhile, the AfD is slamming calls for a ban. âThe renewed call for an AfD ban is completely unfounded and would be completely hopeless,â said Alice Weidel, the co-leader of the AfD. âInstead of engaging in absurd and anti-democratic ban fantasies, Mr. Stegner should be thinking about why his party has been losing voters in droves for years.â
Sahra Wagenknecht, who is the leader of the left-wing BSW, told Welt: âFirst gigantic electoral fraud, then the ban debate: could it get any more stupid? The fact that such proposals are now coming from the self-proclaimed âdemocratic center,â of all places, is disgraceful and will further strengthen the AfD.â
She went so far as to say it was a purely autocratic move.
âNo question, in an autocracy, the âproblemâ would be solved in exactly the same way.â
Even in the SPD, there is debate about a ban.
SPD Minister President of Saxony Stephan Weil (SPD) warned a ban could also fail, which would be âa feast for the AfD.â
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