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Al-Ahed Telegram

70% of Germans Want A New Chancellor

70% of Germans Want A New Chancellor
folder_openGermany access_time8 months ago
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By Staff, Agencies

More than two thirds of German voters are dissatisfied with the work of Chancellor Olaf Scholz, according to a new survey conducted by the polling agency INSA for the Bild newspaper.

A growing number of Germans have grown frustrated with Chancellor Scholz’s so-called “traffic light” coalition government, which consists of the SPD, the Greens and the Free Democrats [FDP], with approval ratings for all three having taken a hit in the polls after just one-and-a-half years in office.

Only 15 percent of responders in the latest INSA survey released by Bild on Saturday said that the traffic light coalition was doing a good job, while almost a half believe that the previous grand coalition of CDU/CSU and the SPD performed better.

Almost two-thirds [64 percent] of respondents said that Germany would “benefit” from a change of government, while less than one in four [22 percent] would rather keep the existing coalition. Some 70% of respondents [out of 1,004 polled between August 17 and 18] were dissatisfied with Scholz personally.

Another poll – commissioned by Germany’s ARD public broadcaster in early August – shows that public approval of the German government fell to just 21%, down from 60% in 2020.

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