BERLIN (Reuters) – Germany’s election produced the narrowest of results, early projections show, but exit polls conducted for broadcasters on Sunday suggested voters had relatively clear ideas about the outcome they wanted to see.
SOCIAL DEMOCRATS WITH AN EDGE
An Infratest dimap poll for ARD showed 38% wanted the SPD to lead the next government, compared to 28% rooting for the conservatives, and more than half wanted the liberal Free Democrats and Greens to be part of it.
The SPD’s Olaf Scholz was preferred Chancellor candidate for 45% of voters, while the conservatives’ Armin Laschet was preferred by 20%.
While the Greens’ Annalena Baerbock was the favourite of just 14%, 20% thought her party had “the best answers to the questions of the future”, compared to 18% for the SPD and 14% for the conservatives.
MERKEL’S SHADOW
Worryingly for whoever succeeds in building a coalition, 60% of those polled by Forschungsgruppe Wahlen in their exit poll for broadcaster ZDF thought nobody would succeed in filling the gap left by Angela Merkel when she leaves after 16 years in office.
GENERATION GAP
The same poll showed a sharp generational divide, with younger people leaning more towards the Greens and the pro-business liberals, and the over-65s – a large section of large of one of the world’s oldest societies – leaning towards the SPD and the conservatives.
PARLIAMENT SWELLS
ZDF estimates the Bundestag will have 740 members – up from 709 in the last parliament. A side-effect of Germany’s complicated electoral system https://www.reuters.com/world/europe/making-elephants-dance-guide-germanys-electoral-system-2021-09-23 is that parliament can vary wildly in size. If the Linke, hovering on the 5% threshold, fail to get in, parliament could end up being smaller.
GREENS HEADED FOR BERLIN TRIUMPH
The Greens failed to live up to their performance at the start of the campaign, when they vied with the conservatives to top polls. But they have achieved some local successes: after parallel elections for a new city government in Berlin, exit polls suggest they have a chance of beating the SPD in what has long been a left-wing stronghold.
FORMER SPY CHIEF’S FAILURE
In South Thuringia, a controversial hard-right former domestic spying chief https://www.reuters.com/world/europe/blunt-outsider-heart-conservative-germanys-election-dilemma-2021-08-27 appears to have failed to win a seat as a conservative. Polls suggest Hans-Georg Maassen, who was forced to step down as Germany’s chief Nazi hunter, is running behind local hero Frank Ullrich, a former East German ski champion, who is the SPD’s candidate.
(Reporting by Thomas Escritt; Editing by Tomasz Janowski)