Dramatic poll graphic illustration depicting Greens (27%) nearly tying CDU (28%) in Baden-Württemberg election, with state flags, voters, and hint of CDU controversy.
Dramatic poll graphic illustration depicting Greens (27%) nearly tying CDU (28%) in Baden-Württemberg election, with state flags, voters, and hint of CDU controversy.
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Greens nearly tied with CDU ahead of Baden-Württemberg election

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A new poll shows the Greens in Baden-Württemberg just one percentage point behind the CDU. The Greens poll at 27 percent, the CDU at 28 percent, days before the state election on March 8. The Greens' rise is linked to controversy over an old video of CDU candidate Manuel Hagel.

The state election in Baden-Württemberg on March 8 promises a tight race for the position of minister-president. According to a poll by Infratest dimap for ARD conducted from February 23 to 25, the Greens with top candidate Cem Özdemir stand at 27 percent, just one percentage point behind the CDU with candidate Manuel Hagel. Compared to the late January poll, when the Greens were at 23 percent and the CDU at 29 percent, the Greens have gained significantly. In October, the gap was even nine percentage points.

Other parties are losing ground: The AfD drops to 18 percent (down two points from January), The Left to 5.5 percent (from 7 percent) and is fighting for entry into the state parliament. The FDP rises to 6 percent (from 5 percent) and would narrowly enter parliament, while the SPD falls to 7 percent (down one point). For reference: In the 2021 election, the Greens received 32.6 percent, the CDU 24.1 percent, the SPD 11 percent, the FDP 10.5 percent, and the AfD 9.7 percent.

The Greens' polling boost coincides with the debate over a 2018 video of Hagel. In it, he describes a school visit: "In the class, 80 percent were girls back then. So there are worse appointments for 29-year-old parliamentarians than this one." He mentions a student: "I'll never forget it, the first question, her name was Eva, brown hair, doe-brown eyes." Hagel admitted: "The introduction to this 2018 interview was crap. My wife washed my head right away."

Greens state leaders Lena Schwelling and Pascal Haggenmüller commented: "Ten days before the election, it's clear: People want Cem Özdemir as minister-president. Only he has the experience needed in these uncertain times." Incumbent Minister-President Winfried Kretschmann (Greens) is not running after three terms and currently leads a green-black coalition. Successor candidates are Hagel, Özdemir, and AfD leader Markus Frohnmaier, who has no coalition prospects.

The poll surveyed 1,530 eligible voters with a margin of error of two to three percentage points. Election polls are inherently uncertain.

人々が言っていること

X discussions center on the Infratest dimap poll showing Greens at 27% nearly tying CDU at 28% before the Baden-Württemberg election. Greens supporters celebrate the momentum linked to Cem Özdemir's popularity. Critics express skepticism about the Greens' rise despite progressive policies and highlight CDU candidate Manuel Hagel's video controversy as a factor. Many note high engagement on candidate satisfaction and tightening race predictions.

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Cem Özdemir and Manuel Hagel shake hands announcing Greens-CDU coalition in Baden-Württemberg.
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Greens and CDU agree on coalition after Baden-Württemberg election

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Eight weeks after the Greens' narrow win in the March state election, they and the CDU have reached a coalition agreement in Baden-Württemberg. Top candidates Cem Özdemir and Manuel Hagel announced it in Stuttgart, with the treaty to be presented next week.

The AfD is clearly ahead of the CDU/CSU in current opinion polls and is approaching the 30 percent mark.

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The Greens and CDU have signed their coalition agreement in Baden-Württemberg. Cem Özdemir is set to be elected the new minister president on Wednesday.

Reiner Haseloff, former Minister President of Saxony-Anhalt, attributed the AfD's strength to distrust in established parties in an interview with Süddeutsche Zeitung. He warned of the consequences of a potential AfD government after the state election on September 6. A coalition with the AfD is out of the question for the CDU, as it aims to destroy the party.

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Sweden's Tidö parties now hold only 174 seats in parliament after former SD MPs Elsa Widding and Katja Nyberg announced they will vote with the opposition on certain issues. Prime Minister Ulf Kristersson's government is fully dependent on the two independents in key votes. Sverigedemokraterna accuses the Greens of buying the votes, which MP and the independents deny.

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