The preliminary results of the German national election on Sunday are the most conservative parties and the extremist right doubled their seats in the National Assembly.
The DEUTSCHLAND (AFD) replacement party in the former East Germany had special support in some areas of 46.7 percent.
The Christian Democratic Union (CDU), a conservative conservative party with the Christian Social Union in Bayern (CSU), won the most votes in general, combining approximately 29 % of national votes.
CDU leader Friedrich Morsis, who has so far been opposed to the party, will be German Chancellor with 208 seats for CDU/CSU on Monday.
The current Chancellor Olaf School, who also had the most Bundestag seats before, saw his party seats significantly reduced to 120, now the only biggest in the legislature. Is.
The German Parliament has reduced its seats from 736 to 630 under the new system since 2021.
Much of this bundestag transformation owes an unprecedented success for the AFD, which is now the second largest with 152 seats and about 21 % of national votes.
AFD, the leader of Alice Widel, has doubled its dealership in Bundestag and won only 85 seats in the 2021 election – and it is important to raise its national support from 10.4 percent to 20.8 percent.
The current SPD lost about 2 million votes to conservatives and 720,000 people to AFD. According to preliminary results, Deutschland has won 890,000 votes from the Free Democratic Party (FDP) and 1 million votes from CDC/CSU conservatives.
Temporary results show that more than 10.3 million Germans voted for AFD, almost as much as the current SPD party in 2021 (11.9 million).
The results indicate that AFD has mobilized 2 million non -voters than any other political party in Germany.
About 83.5 percent of the eligible population voted in Sunday, the highest recorded since 1990.
Throughout the board, the AFD obtained support in each area and received at least 15 % of the votes in most constituencies.
The largest AFD support basement occurred in East Germany, where most constituencies (outside Berlin) saw the right -wing right party in more than 30 % of the votes.
At Görlitz, a traditional city on the Polish border, AFD won 46.7 % of the vote.
Some constituencies in the internal Berlin in the eastern AFD wave were less sweeping and gaining more support for the extremist right party, with only 7.2 % of the vote in the central region of Friedrichin / Cruzberg / Penzorgberg.
Some of these can be linked to widespread population differences between the German capital, which tends to be more diverse and younger and other countries.
However, the AFD still won more than 20 % of the votes in the Lictennberg and Treptow-Köpenick in Berlin.
In the Turingia area, the AFD power increased by 14 percent and 38.6 % votes on Sunday; Much higher than any party in the region.
Thingia is the most severe AFD support site, led by Bjorn Höcke, which has been fined several times for the use of Nazi symbols. In Independent Tom Vanyeing reported this week on AFD and anti -forecast in Turingia.
How did different demographics vote?
The election in Germany reflects the gender gap between the right and the left that has emerged in several recent elections around the world, including the United Kingdom and the United States.
The voting gap shows that men are likely to vote on conservative parties, while women are equally divided, but rely on the left.
There is the biggest difference at the AFD support level.
While approximately 1 out of 4 men (24 %) voted for AFD, only 17 percent of women did it, meaning that men are 29 percent more tended to the right -wing right party.
Different trends appear among different age groups.
Youth in Germany (24-24 years old) are likely to support the Left Democratic Left Socialist Party (25 %), but at least likely support the left SPD (12 %).
At the same time, AFD has relatively constant support in all age groups. Except for more than 70s, only 10 percent of them voted for the extremist right party.
More than 70s went to more conservative CDC/CSU parties (42 %), while a significant number of current SDP (25 %) supported.
The Germans 25 to 44 were likely to support AFD above any other party, leaning under 34 years of centrality and more than 35s, which generally relied on the right.
When dividing education, people with elementary education (up to high school) voted twice as high than those with higher education (13 %) to AFD (28 %).