German election results explained in graphics – DW (English)
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Mainstream conservatives led by Friedrich Merz have won Germany’s 2025 election. Here’s a look in charts at the wins and losses, seats in parliament, possible coalition outcomes and voter demographics.Sunday saw a record-breaking voter turnout of 83.5%, the highest since unification in 1990, as Germans casted their ballots in an early federal election on February 23.With vote counting finished, preliminary results show the conservative Christian Democratic Union (CDU) led by chancellor candidate Friedrich Merz and its sister Christian Social Union (CSU) won the election.The far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD) was projected to finish second.The big winner of the election in terms of voter gains was the right-wing populist AfD, which nearly doubled its vote share.The center-left Social Democrats (SPD), led by current Chancellor Olaf Scholz, recorded not only its worst result in a federal election but also its largest loss of votes compared to previous elections. The neoliberal Free Democratic Party (FDP), whose withdrawal from the coalition triggered the snap election, also suffered heavy losses. The party won’t enter the Bundestag after failing to meet the 5% threshold.When Germans go to the polls, they have two votes: one for a candidate to represent their constituency and the second for a party’s state list.The first vote is for a direct candidate running in the respective electoral district and determines half of the parliament’s total composition, ensuring each district is represented. The second vote decides the strength of the parties in the lower house of parliament, the Bundestag, and thereby establishes how many candidates from that state list will be granted seats in the Bundestag.There are 630 seats in the Bundestag. The number of seats a party has is determined by their vote share. A party must receive at least 5% of votes to enter parliament. However, an exception is granted to parties that field winning candidates in at least three electoral districts: winning three individual mandates lifts the 5% threshold for the respective party. While the CDU/CSU have won the largest share of votes, they don’t hold an absolute majority. The party is set to win 208 seats in the Bundestag. They will need to enter a coalition with another party to secure 316 seats, the minimum for a majority, and form the next government.The CDU has ruled out a coalition with the AfD, insisting that it is the “firewall” to the far right. That leaves a two-way grand coalition with the SPD or a three-way coalition that includes the Greens as the most likely options, depending on the final seat distribution. The coalition calculator shows possible coalition outcomes.Sunday’s election saw voters switching affiliations and moving across the party spectrum. One of the most significant migrations was away from the center-left SPD to the conservative CDU/CSU, which picked up roughly 2 million votes from the Social Democrats. The Left Party benefited from voter migration from both the SPD and the Greens, adding 560,000 and 700,000 votes, respectively.Young people between the ages of 18 and 24 leaned to the far ends of the political spectrum, casting their ballot more often for the far-right AfD and the Left Party. The more traditional parties of SPD and CDU received their lowest voter returns from younger voters.The Greens, long a favorite with the youth vote, had one of their lowest percentage of votes in this age group. Voters over 60 were more likely to vote SPD and CDU.Men tended to vote more conservatively than women, casting their ballots more often for the CDU and the AfD, whereas women tended to vote more for the SPD, the Greens and the Left Party.The difference in votes according to gender was only a few percentage points, except when it came to voting for the AfD.The gender gap between men and women voting for the AfD was 7%. The gender difference for the other parties was only 2-3%.Voters without a college education were more likely to vote conservative, with the CDU and AfD being their favored parties, followed by the SPD. People with a basic education level were twice as likely to vote AfD as those with advanced degrees. German voters with advanced degrees were more than twice as likely to vote for the Greens and the Left Party compared to those with basic education levels.Nationally, the AfD achieved roughly 20% of the vote, but results differ significantly from region to region. The AfD, which is classified in part as right-wing extremist, is now the strongest force in eastern Germany. In the states of Brandenburg, Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania, Saxony, Saxony-Anhalt and Thuringia, the far-right party is set for a resounding victory, with many constituencies reporting over 30% of the second vote going to the AfD. The CDU and SPD trailed far behind. In the state of Thuringia, home to Björn Höcke, who was convicted for using banned Nazi slogans, the party received more than 38% of the vote, nearly double the number of votes for the CDU. The city-state of Berlin is the exception in Germany’s former East, where the Left Party won the most votes in the capital.For the first time in an election, the AfD won the majority of the second votes in two constituencies in the western part of the country, Gelsenkirchen and Kaiserslautern. However, in both cities, SPD candidates won the majority of the first votes.The East-West divide is mirrored in the distribution of votes for the CDU. The CDU, together with the CSU, received a higher percentage of the vote in the south, west and north. In Bavaria, the CSU won all 47 constituencies.The SPD had its strongest returns in the north and west, where the party’s traditional pro-labor policies still enjoy support. The Greens won the majority of second-ballot votes in urban centers in the western part of the country. Graphics by Gianna Grün.
Edited by: Michaela Cavanagh and Kate Hairsine
Source: https://www.dw.com/en/german-election-results-and-voter-demographics-explained-in-charts/a-71724186