In about a week and a half, a new state parliament will be elected in Lower Saxony. The latest survey points to an election victory for the SPD. Like the second-placed CDU, Prime Minister Weil’s party has to accept noticeable losses.
According to a new survey, the SPD around Prime Minister Stephan Weil is still on course for re-election a few days before the state elections in Lower Saxony. In the “Lower Saxony Check” of several daily newspapers, the SPD comes to 31 percent – that’s two points more than the “Lower Saxony Check” at the end of August. The CDU with challenger Bernd Althusmann is 27 percent (plus 1). The Greens are losing popularity and are at 19 percent (minus 3).
The fourth strongest force in the survey is the AfD with 9 percent (plus 1). With 5 percent (minus 1), the FDP has to worry about entering the state parliament. The left would fail at the five percent hurdle with an unchanged 3 percent.
The Forsa institute surveyed voters in 2018. The state election is on October 9th. The SPD and CDU are currently governing in a grand coalition in Lower Saxony. A continuation of the alliance is considered unlikely.
In the 2017 election, the SPD (36.9 percent) became the strongest force, followed by the CDU (33.6 percent), the Greens (8.7 percent), the FDP (7.5 percent) and the AfD (6.2 percent). .
Election polls are generally subject to uncertainties. Among other things, declining party ties and increasingly short-term voting decisions make it difficult for the opinion research institutes to weight the data collected. In principle, surveys only reflect the opinion at the time of the survey and are not a forecast of the outcome of the election.