AfD ahead of the Greens for the first time since 2018, according to a survey

“Sunday Trend”
According to the Insa survey, AfD is ahead of the Greens for the first time since 2018

AfD co-chair Alice Weidel walks past Economics Minister Robert Habeck and Chancellor Olaf Scholz
© Kay Nietfeld / DPA
According to the “Sunday trend” of “Bild am Sonntag”, the AfD is ahead of the Greens for the first time since 2018. Accordingly, the right-wing populists get 16 percent of the votes. The Greens lost a point and are now only 15 percent.
For the first time in years AfD in the “Sunday trend” of the “Bild am Sonntag” again in front of the Greens. In the most recent survey, the right-wing populists come to 16 percent, one point more than in the previous week, as the newspaper reported on Sunday. The Greens lost one percentage point and are now only 15 percent. Most recently, the AfD was in the poll in 2018 by the Greens.
Insa survey: AfD in front of the Greens for the first time since 2018
In first place remains in the current elevation according to the information, the Union with 28 percent (minus one). The SPD comes to an unchanged 21 percent. The FDP increases by one percentage point to eight percent, the left also gains a point and comes to five percent.
For the “sunday trendThe polling company Insa interviewed 1,202 people on behalf of the newspaper from March 13 to 17. The statistical margin of error was given as plus/minus 3.1 percentage points.
The “ARD-Deutschlandtrend” came to similar conclusions. Here, too, the Greens posted their worst result in a year. if on Sunday federal election, the party would only get 16 percent, according to the survey published on Friday. This is one percentage point less than in the previous month.
The SPD can maintain its result of 18 percent, the FDP even improve by one percentage point to seven percent. Overall, however, the three traffic light games would still lose more than ten percent compared to the result in the 2021 federal election and thus again miss their own majority.
The Union would lose one percentage point, but would remain the strongest group with 30 percent. The AfD could increase one percentage point to 15 percent. Five percent of voters would still choose the left.
For the “Germany trend”, the Infratest Dimap institute surveyed a total of 1215 voters in Germany by telephone and online from March 14th to 15th.