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The approval for the governing parties remains largely stable.

If the Bundestag were to be re-elected now, the CDU / CSU could expect 37 percent and the SPD 15 percent.

This emerges from the RTL / ntv “trend barometer” published on Saturday by the opinion research institute Forsa.

The Union improved by one point, the SPD deteriorated by one point.

The Greens gained two percentage points compared to the previous week and came to 21 percent.

The left came to 8 percent (one point better), the FDP unchanged at 6 percent and the AfD at 7 percent.

For the AfD this is a loss of two points compared to the previous week and, according to Forsa, the party's worst value since July 2017. The party was sharply criticized after MPs invited several troublemakers to the Bundestag last week.

The activists had insulted and filmed CDU politician Peter Altmaier, among others.

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If the citizens could vote for the Federal Chancellor directly, CSU boss Markus Söder would currently have 34 percent, followed by the Green chairman Robert Habeck with 21 percent and SPD candidate Olaf Scholz with 15 percent.

Habeck wins three percentage points compared to the previous week, Scholz loses two.

Söder's value remains the same.

30 percent of the electorate would not vote for any of the three politicians.

When asked which party can best deal with the problems in Germany, the CDU and CSU come to 41 percent and thus gain one percentage point.

In the Forsa survey, 8 percent were in favor of the Greens, who thus lose three percentage points compared to the previous week.

The SPD also loses five percentage points and comes to 5 percent.

41 percent do not consider any party competent to solve the problems.