[The Emnid poll of 1,885 voters gave the SPD 33 percent of the vote,
up 1 point in the last week, while the Christian Democrats (CDU) and
their Bavarian sister party the Christian Social Union (CSU) would win
32 percent, down 1 point.]

http://www.reuters.com/article/us-germany-election-poll-idUSKBN15Y0FS?il=0

WORLD NEWS | Sun Feb 19, 2017 | 12:19pm EST

Germany's SPD moves ahead of Merkel's party in poll

German Chancellor Angela Merkel speaks during the 53rd Munich Security
Conference in Munich, Germany, February 18, 2017. Guido
Bergmann/Bundesregierung/Handout via Reuters

By Erik Kirschbaum | BERLIN

Germany's center-left Social Democrats (SPD) have moved ahead of
Chancellor Angela Merkel's conservative Christian Democrats (CDU/CSU)
in an opinion poll by the Emnid institute for the first time since
2006, Bild am Sonntag newspaper said.

The SPD's unexpected surge of some 12 points in the last month has
caught Merkel and her conservatives off guard, analysts said, just
seven months before the Sept. 24 election, where she had expected to
win a fourth term easily.

***The Emnid poll of 1,885 voters gave the SPD 33 percent of the vote,
up 1 point in the last week, while the Christian Democrats (CDU) and
their Bavarian sister party the Christian Social Union (CSU) would win
32 percent, down 1 point.*** [Emphasis added.]

The SPD has now gained a record-breaking 12 points in the last four
weeks, according to Bild am Sonntag newspaper, since former European
Parliament president Martin Schulz was named as its candidate to run
against Merkel in the Sept. 24 election.

"The increase is unmatched in the history of the Bild am Sonntag
polls," the newspaper wrote.

The SPD, junior partner in Merkel's ruling coalition, had trailed her
conservative bloc for years in opinion polls until nomination of
Schulz revived the party. It last won an election under Gerhard
Schroeder in 2002.

"This is a serious poll showing the SPD coming from nowhere to
overtake the CDU/CSU," Thomas Jaeger, a political scientist at Cologne
University, told Reuters.

"It's amazing to see how unprepared the CDU was for someone like
Schulz ... They assumed the SPD was going to stay stuck in the 20-25
percent range. They've been caught pants down."

But a top Merkel party ally, Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble,
dismissed the idea the CDU/CSU failed to prepare.

"We're certainly taking him seriously," he said of Schulz. "He's
helped the SPD find its courage again. But he feels he's not a part of
our grand coalition. It's a bit of a contradiction because his party
has contributed to things going well in Germany. He needs to come up
with a bit more substance."

On Friday, the Electoral Research Group published an opinion poll for
ZDF television showing the SPD at 30 percent but still behind the
CDU/CSU, which was on 34 percent.

Schulz, a former book-seller without a high school degree, has
revitalized the SPD with his straight-talking candor. He has struck a
chord with his promise to campaign for social justice and fight
right-wing populism.

Even though the SPD has been junior partner to Merkel's CDU/CSU in a
grand coalition since 2013, Schulz has campaigned against her policies
as an outsider with no position inside the government.

"It was completely unexpected the way Schulz has won back over so many
former SPD voters who had turned their back on the party," said
Jaeger. "He speaks their language and sounds like one of them. There's
a lot of enthusiasm all of a sudden."

The Emnid poll in Bild am Sonntag also showed the SPD would be able to
form a left-of-center coalition with the hard-left Linke party and the
pro-environment Greens party.

The Linke were unchanged at 8 percent and the Greens steady at 7.
Together with the SPD's 33 percent, the left-of-center coalition would
have 48 percent and enough for a government as small parties fell
under the 5 percent threshold.

The CDU/CSU at 32 percent, the Free Democrats (FDP) at a steady 6
percent and the ostracized far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD),
down 1 point to 9 percent, would have a combined total of 47 percent.

(Reporting by Erik Kirschbaum. Editing by Ruth Pitchford and Susan Thomas)


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