After the recent disagreements in the German traffic light coalition of SPD, Greens and FDP, almost two-thirds of citizens want a new government, according to a survey. Chancellor Olaf Scholz in particular is not well off among those questioned.
In the Sunday trend of the opinion research institute Insa for the “Bild am Sonntag”, 64 percent answered that a change of government would be good for Germany. Not even one in four (22 percent) want to stay in government.
In particular, satisfaction with Chancellor Olaf Scholz and his SPD is declining. 70 percent of those surveyed are now dissatisfied with the chancellor’s work – ten percentage points more than four weeks ago.
SPD historically bad in polls
In the Sunday trend, the SPD is also increasingly losing ground to the Alternative for Germany (AfD), coming in at just 18 percent. That is two points less than in the previous week. The SPD is three points behind the AfD – the party classified by the Office for the Protection of the Constitution as a suspected right-wing extremist, still at 21 percent.
The Union, at 27 percent, rose slightly by one point, the Greens by 14 percent and the FDP by 8 percent. The left remained at five percent.
Source: Krone

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