Germany’s far-right AfD party looks set to make large gains when the country heads to the polls on Sunday.
The centre-right Christian Democrats (CDU/CSU) looks set to once again become the largest party in the Bundestag with 220 seats, allowing them to reinstall their first chancellor since Angela Merkel stepped down in 2021.
According to YouGov’s final MRP poll before the election, the far-right AfD’s 145 seats will surpass the 115 projected for the governing SPD, after its popularity has collapsed under chancellor Olaf Scholz.
The Greens, who partner the SPD in a coalition, are also projected to fall from their record 15 per cent vote share in 2021 to 13 per cent on Sunday.
German president Frank-Walter Steinmeier called the elections after Mr Scholz lost a vote of confidence in the German Bundestag on 15 January – after losing the support of his coalition when he fired finance minister Christian Lindner amid tensions over economic policy.
But the governing coalition had been falling in popularity long before the dispute within government, with the AfD having surged in federal elections in Thuringia and Saxony last September.
How Elon Musk became a champion of the German far-right
When a young German anti-climate activist nicknamed the “anti-Greta Thunberg” began flattering tech billionaire Elon Musk on X, few could have foreseen it leading to the tech billionaire wholeheartedly endorsing Germany’s far-right. It would take just ten months.
X owner turned Trump ally Musk has described the AfD as the only party that “can save Germany”, interviewed the party’s leader, Alice Wiedel, spoken at the AfD’s election rally and written an op-ed endorsing the party.
Musk has freely admitted that before his first interaction with the “anti-Greta Thunberg” Naomi Seibt on April 20 last year, he “didn’t know [the] AfD from a hole in the ground”.
Since she was 19, Seibt has spent five years becoming a right-wing firebrand, slowly building up an audience largely outside of Germany.
She began with opposition to climate activism, working with a pro-Trump, climate denial US think tank called Heartland Institute, but quickly turned to fighting against the “woke mind virus”. She is anti-feminist, anti-Islam, pro-Russian and dismissive of German guilt over its Nazi past.
Tom Watling and Alicja Hagopian report:
Andy Gregory23 February 2025 07:00
Voices | Germany’s election is a litmus test for Trump’s right-wing impact on Europe
Our columnist Mary Dejevsky writes:
Europe thought it was better prepared for a Donald Trump presidency the second time around, but it clearly had little idea of the hurricane about to head east. The way Trump has exercised power since entering the White House has been dizzying. It has distressed much of the European and British establishment, while lending new dynamism to the political right – the actual right, that is, not its liberal European rendition.
You have only to consider the right-wing pow-wow that was the conference of the Alliance for Responsible Citizenship (ARC) in London this week. Meet the right as a rising political force, which may well be set to grow for as long as Trump is in power and as long as Trumpism endures.
But what of continental Europe? Could it be that Trump is changing the political dynamics here as well, to the point where the right could become dominant across the region? To an extent, the views brought together by the ARC are an Anglo-Saxon phenomenon. But you could also argue that, in much of Europe, we are almost there.
The right was successfully creeping across Europe well before Trump 2.0 came along. Giorgia Meloni won power in Italy in 2022; there are what are widely regarded as populist governments of the right in Hungary, Slovakia and now Austria, and there would also be such a government in Romania had the election not been annulled. The far-right Freedom Party topped the polls in the Netherlands in 2023 and is part of a four-party coalition. The far-right Alternative fur Deutschland (AfD) is the main opposition in several regions in Germany, after heading last year’s polls, while Marine Le Pen’s National Rally is the main opposition in the French parliament, following Emmanuel Macron’s ill-judged summer election.
But there remains a big constraint on far-right parties being elected to government in France and Germany, which can be summed up as history. Voters in France have repeatedly shrunk from electing a far-right president or parliament, despite coming near, and those German regions where the AfD has topped the polls face the opprobrium of the wider electorate, with huge “Never Again!” protests every recent weekend. Could the Trump effect change this?
There may be a preliminary answer as early as this Sunday night.
Andy Gregory23 February 2025 06:01
Frontrunner Merz insists he will not break far-right ‘firewall’ for second time
In his final pitch to voters, frontrunner Friedrich Merz underscored his calls for a tougher stance on migration, but sought to insist that he would not repeat his move to break the so-called “firewall” against the far-right again.
Last month, he brought a nonbinding motion calling for many more migrants to be turned back at Germany’s borders to parliament. The motion was approved thanks to votes from AfD – marking a first in post-war Germany which prompted opponents to accuse Mr Merz of breaking a taboo. He rejects the criticism.
“We will under no circumstances discuss any talks, never mind negotiations or a participation in government, with AfD,” Mr Merz insisted on Saturday.
But some voters are finding it difficult to accept this pledge, including some in the LGBTQ+ community. As we reported earlier this week, many of AfD’s LGBTQ-related demands overlap with those of the conservatives, including reversing the trans self-determination law and restricting the use of inclusive language and gender-affirming care for minors.
“Whoever does it once, does it twice, and three times,” Andre Lehmann, board member at Germany’s LGBTQ+ umbrella group LSVD told The Independent. “It’s not only a threat for LGBTI people in Germany, but for many, many people in this country, and for democracy as a whole.”
Andy Gregory23 February 2025 05:00
Musk has used his influence to spread misinformation and populist narratives, SPD politician says
Dirk Wiese, a politician in the centre-left SPD wing of the government, told The Independent that Elon Musk has “used his influence for deliberate provocations, misinformation, and the spread of populist narratives”.
For Wiese, Musk “crossed a red line” when he opened up his social media platform X, formerly Twitter, to unregulated, unverified content.
“His platform, X, has increasingly become a hub for right-wing conspiracy theories and anti-democratic actors,” he says.
“This has real-world consequences, in Germany, too. Disinformation undermines social cohesion and can influence elections. Musk crosses a red line when he deliberately interferes in democratic processes.
“Those who deliberately sow division, provoke, and disregard historical accountability must face consequences—whether in public perception or in business. Germany will stand firm against any form of foreign interference and disinformation.”
Tom Watling, Alicja Hagopian23 February 2025 04:00
Who is far-right leader Alice Weidel?
The 46-year-old is making the first bid of the far-right, Alternative for Germany (AfD) for the country’s top job.
An economist by training, Weidel joined the party shortly after it was founded in 2013.
She has been co-leader of her party’s parliamentary group since the party first won seats in the national legislature in 2017. She has been a co-leader of the party itself since 2022, along with Tino Chrupalla.
In December, she was nominated as the candidate for chancellor – though other parties say they won’t work with the AfD, so she has no realistic path to the top job at present.
Who is frontrunner Friedrich Merz?
Germany’s 69-year-old opposition leader has been the front-runner in the election campaign, with his center-right Union bloc leading polls.
He became the leader of his Christian Democratic Union party after longtime chancellor Angela Merkel – a former rival – stepped down in 2021. Merz has taken his party in a more conservative direction. In the election campaign, he has made curbing irregular migration a central issue.
Merz lacks experience in government. He joined the European Parliament in 1989 before becoming a lawmaker in Germany five years later. He took a break from active politics for several years after 2009, practicing as a lawyer and heading the supervisory board of investment manager BlackRock’s German branch.
Read more about his opponents here:
Analysis | The rights of Germany’s LGBTQ+ community are under attack
For many LGBTQ+ Germans, the upcoming elections are a source of anxiety, a fight to maintain existing rights rather than a push for new ones.
The focus has shifted from progress to preservation, with hard-won gains now under threat.
Despite the fact its candidate for chancellor is openly lesbian, the far-right AfD party has become the loudest voice against LGBTQ+ rights in parliament, and even filed a motion to repeal same-sex marriage and adoption in 2017.
While the far-right party alone will likely not have enough seats to push these demands forward, many fear that frontrunner Friedrich Merz’s recent collaboration with AfD on migration – which shattered a longstanding taboo against working with the far-right – could see his CDU/CSU party joining AfD to pass new LGBTQ+ rights restrictions nationally – just as they have already done at the state level.
Many of AfD’s LGBTQ-related demands overlap with those of the conservatives, be it reversing the trans self-determination law or restricting the use of inclusive language and gender-affirming care for minors.
Enrique Anarte has more in this report:
Andy Gregory23 February 2025 01:00
Scholz makes final appeal to voters
Chancellor Olaf Scholz has insisted that he still hopes for an improbable last-minute comeback, as he made his final appeal to voters ahead of tomorrow’s vote.
At an event in Potsdam, which he represents in parliament, Mr Scholz again sought to cast doubt on frontrunner Friedrich Merz’s reliability and portrayed his party as the strongest bulwark against the AfD playing any role.
On the sidelines of an earlier event in Potsdam, Mr Scholz said that he was “convinced that, this time, many people will only make their decision at the polling station”.
“I don’t believe in miracles, but in an election victory,” he was quoted as saying by Germany’s dpa news agency.
His governing SDP party is currently projected to come in third place behind Mr Friedrich’s CDU/CSU and the far-right AfD.
Andy Gregory22 February 2025 23:59
Pictured: Counterprotesters march against AfD
Protests against the far right have been held in cities across Germany today, including in the Thuringia city of Erfurt, where the AfD has held its campaign finale.

Andy Gregory22 February 2025 23:01
AfD leader is most popular German politician on Elon Musk’s X
Elon Musk’s tweets have directly contributed to making AfD leader Alice Weidel the most popular German politician on X, and broadened the reach of her posts, according to research from the Humboldt Institute for Internet and Society and Synosys.
Sami Nenno and Philipp Lorenz-Spreen, authors of the research, found that retweets or mentions of the AfD and/or Weidel often led to much higher reach than average; from around 200,000 views, to over 1 million.
In addition, the most intensive period of Musk’s interaction with the AfD and related content occurred between late December and mid-January; over which time Weidel’s following nearly doubled, from just over 500,000 to 985,000.
Wiedel’s following profited enormously from interaction with Musk. Yet the authors found that the reach of Musk’s amplification has been limited to AfD and Weidel’s presence on X, with no clear correlation between greater influence on Facebook, Instagram, or TikTok.
“So far, we cannot find any strong evidence that Weidel’s popularity on X is also spreading to other platforms. As things stand, the Musk effect is therefore limited to X,” write Nenno and Lorenz Spreen.
Tom Watling, Alicja Hagopian22 February 2025 22:02