If the Bundestag elections were held now, the current ruling coalition would no longer exist. This is reported by BILD with reference to a survey prepared specifically for the publication by the INSA Institute.
"The left-wing Sarah Wagenknecht Alliance party is currently gaining five percent of the vote and for the first time overcomes the barrier for passage to the Bundestag. At the same time, if there are six factions in the German parliament, then the usual coalitions will no longer work," the newspaper notes.
So, the CDU/CSU loses one percent and gets 27%, Alternative for Germany (AfD) - 24%, Social Democrats (SPD) — 15%, Greens and leftists — 11% each.
"The FDP remains only 3%, which is not enough to get into the Bundestag. With such figures, classical alliances like the "black-red" coalition of the CDU and the SPD do not gain the necessary majority: Together, they receive only 42% of the vote," Bild continues.
The publication believes that the CDU and the AFD (51%) could make up the majority, but such a coalition is impossible today. Despite the fact that after the last elections, only two parties have added to the rating — the AfD and the left.