Support for far-right triples in western German vote, early forecasts show
- The 2025-09-14 local elections in North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany's most populous state, saw support for the far-right AfD more than triple, challenging the leading CDU-SPD coalition.
- This surge reflects the AfD's efforts to expand from eastern strongholds amid growing voter concerns about immigration and dissatisfaction with the coalition's handling of the economy and migration.
- Initial forecasts showed the CDU remaining the strongest party with 34% while the AfD reached 16.5%, and the SPD slipped to 22.5%, signaling a political shift.
- AfD co-leader Tino Chrupalla called the results "a great success for us," while SPD officials warned that democrats must counter this emerging path of right-wing extremist support.
- These results suggest growing far-right influence in western Germany, raising concerns about political polarization and the coalition's stability amid rising nationalist sentiment.
186 Articles
186 Articles
Profits for the AfD, losses for the SPD: What do the people in North Rhine-Westphalia say about the result of the local elections? A mood picture from Cologne and Gelsenkirchen.
As in most of Europe, the far right continues to surge in Germany. The right-wing populist AfD tripled its votes in the local elections in Germany's most populous state. The election shows that the party is far from just an East German phenomenon, writes Kjeld Hybel in this analysis.
The AfD's mission to seduce West Germany is starting to pay off
The Alternative für Deutschland (AfD) party continued its westward march in popularity across Germany yesterday, securing third place in the local elections in the western state of North Rhine-Westphalia. Preliminary results show that, alongside the outcomes of mayoralty and district administrator elections which took place in the state, the far-right party won 14.5 percent of the vote across the 396 municipalities which went to the polls. The l…
The Alternative für Deutschland tripled its score at the communal elections in North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany's most populous region on Sunday 14 September. If the right centre of Chancellor Merz's CDU resists the wave, the SPD and the ecologists retreat.
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