If there were an election in Berlin on Sunday … the Greens would be in front!

From Hildburg Bruns

In the hot summer, Berlin is green. The eco-party would have a hair-thin lead with one percent (21 percent) if a new parliament were elected on Sunday – ahead of the SPD and CDU with only 20 percent each.

This is the result of an exclusive survey for BILD. Actually, the matter for the next four years is clear: Franziska Giffey (44, SPD) is the governing mayor in the current election period – but early elections are by no means impossible after the chaos with wrong ballot papers and hours of queuing for the last vote (September 26). .

► Which party does the Berlin electorate want to see at the head of a senate?

SPD: 19 percent

Greens: 12 percent

CDU: 17 percent

Only 57 percent of Greens voters also want to lead the government. In the SPD, 69 percent are in favor of the top position, while 74 percent of CDU voters are hoping for it.

► In which party can the Berliners basically imagine a cross in the next election?

SPD: In addition to the regular voters (20 percent), there is an additional potential of 28 percent.

Greens: 21 percent plus another 17 percent potential.

CDU: 20 percent voters plus 16 percent potential votes.

Left: 12 percent plus 15 percent potential.

AfD: 8 percent plus 5 percent potential.

FDP: 7 percent plus 10 percent potential.

INSA boss Hermann Binkert (57) says about the specific voting situation: “The current red-green-red coalition together comes to 53 percent, but then under the leadership of the Greens.” Alternatively, there would also be majorities for green-black-yellow (so-called Jamaica coalition ) and a German coalition led by the CDU or SPD, including the Liberals, with 47 percent.

Binkert: “SPD, Greens and CDU are so close together that little movement leads to completely new constellations.”

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