According to a recent survey, the satisfaction of the people in Bavaria with Markus Söders (CSU) politics has decreased and has reached the lowest level since October 2019.
Munich - The current pandemic situation in Bavaria is particularly precarious in a Germany-wide comparison. Markus Söder (CSU), as Bavarian Prime Minister, has therefore introduced strict corona measures together with his government in view of the high number of infections. In locations where the seven-day incidence is over 1,000, additional restrictions apply. The new measures could come into force next Wednesday (November 24th).
Before the announcement of the new corona measures on Friday (November 19), a survey was carried out by the opinion research institute Civey, the results of which have now been published.
This showed that the satisfaction of the people in Bavaria with the work of Markus Söder (CSU) has decreased.
The survey was commissioned by the
Augsburger Allgemeine Zeitung
, which has now reported in detail on the results.
Declining satisfaction with Söder's policy: five percentage points less than in the previous month
According to the survey, only 41 percent of the Bavarian population are satisfied with Söder's government work - a total of five percent less than in the previous month.
This is the lowest value since October 2019 in these surveys by Civey.
Almost every third person surveyed stated that they were “very dissatisfied” with Söder’s policy.
13 percent of those surveyed did not want to make a judgment.
In addition, the survey showed that the entire CSU has lost approval in Bavaria.
If a state election were to take place in Bavaria on Sunday, only 33 percent of the voters would have voted for the CSU.
According to the survey, there is still a lot of approval for the Greens, who would be behind the CSU with 18 percent of the vote.
Survey low for AfD: worst result since the beginning of February
According to the survey, the SPD would have had to accept slight losses in a state election - it would have deteriorated by two percentage points and only received 14 percent of the vote.
The free voters around Hubert Aiwanger, on the other hand, gained two percentage points and received 11 percent of the vote.
Significant losses in the polls can be seen in the AfD: While it was still ten percent in mid-October, they would now only vote for six percent of Bavarians.
For the AfD, this represents the worst survey value since the beginning of February. The extent to which these survey results reflect the rapid deterioration of the corona pandemic in Bavaria will be better assessed on the basis of the upcoming surveys.
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