
(ANSA) - BERLINO, FEB 2 - In a very tense political climate, Germans are anxiously following the polls these days to see what will happen three weeks from now at the ballot box, while Bild wonders if the country is "still governable." Friedrich Merz's fiasco with the Migrant Tightening Bill, in axis with the ultra-right Afd, would not, for now, have caused major shifts in the CHD, instead gifting a point to Alice Weidel's party and Olaf Scholz's Social Democrats. It will have to wait until the next few days, however, to see how the electorate will really orient itself after this heated political week, which is closing with a large demonstration in Berlin, where thousands of people are protesting precisely against the Cdu, which has jeopardized the so-called "Brandmauer," the cordon sanitaire that insulates the far right. According to the Insa poll, commissioned by Axel Springer's tabloid, the Cdu would be deadlocked at 30 percent, while Afd would have 22 (+1) and the Spd 17 (+1). Data emerged from surveys taken both on Thursday (after the motion passed in the Bundestag thanks to votes from Alternative fuer Deutschland) and on Friday, after the bill failed and was rejected by MPs. According to Insa, the Greens would be stationary at 12 percent, Bsw gathers 6 percent support (-1) and the Liberals would have just 4. In general, Union (Cdu-Csu) values have been fluctuating between 29 and 30 for weeks, Afd is given between 20 and 23 percent (strengthened especially by Elon Musk's endorsements) , Spd between 15 and 17 percent, and the Greens between 12 and 15 percent. Among the open questions is also the decisive one about which colors might form the next Bundesregierung, also in light of the strong climate of distrust marking the relations of the main parties after the convulsive parliamentary days that saw Spd and Greens on the warpath against Merz's gamble. The Bild also reported on the liberals' strong frustration, publishing a leaked indiscretion from internal chat: "I'm starting to clear out my office," wrote in fact the number two, Wolfgang Kubicki, embittered by his party colleagues, who blasted the bill on Friday. (ANSA).