WORLD / EUROPE
German SPD overtakes Greens, close in on conservatives before election
Published: Aug 18, 2021 06:13 PM
German Chancellor Angela Merkel attends a question session of the German Bundestag in Berlin, capital of Germany, on March 24, 2021. (Florian Gaertner/photothek/Handout via Xinhua)

German Chancellor Angela Merkel attends a question session of the German Bundestag in Berlin, capital of Germany, on March 24, 2021. (Florian Gaertner/photothek/Handout via Xinhua)

Germany's center-left Social Democrats (SPD) have overtaken the Greens and are closing the gap with Chancellor Angela Merkel's conservatives less than six weeks before a federal election, an opinion poll showed on Wednesday.

Support for the conservative bloc led by Armin Laschet, who has been widely seen as frontrunner to succeed Merkel as chancellor after the September 26 election, has ebbed since the end of June, when it was polling at 28-30 percent.

The latest poll by research institute Forsa put the conservatives on 23 percent, unchanged from a week ago. The Social Democrats (SPD), whose chancellor candidate Olaf Scholz tops the popularity ratings, was up 2 points at 21 percent.

This is the slimmest gap between the two parties since March 2017 and opens various coalition options. The most likely scenario until a few weeks ago, a conservative-Greens alliance, now seems less likely.

The Greens, led by chancellor candidate Annalena Baerbock, were down 1 point at 19 percent.

The Taliban swift takeover of Afghanistan has had little impact on voting intentions although Germany had the second-largest military contingent there after the US and is trying to evacuate people.

After 16 years leading Europe's biggest economy, Merkel is stepping down as chancellor after the election. Her bloc, made up of her Christian Democrats and the Bavarian Christian Social Union, looks to be missing her electoral pull.

The ratings of Laschet, premier of the most populous German state, North Rhine-Westphalia, have dropped since he was seen laughing on a visit to a flood-stricken town and had to apologize.

Voters widely see Scholz, finance minister in Merkel's coalition, as a safe pair of hands. Some 29 percent of respondents told Forsa they would back Scholz if there were a direct vote for chancellor, about 17 points ahead of Laschet. Baerbock was on 15 percent.

Reuters