The cards have been reshuffled, and Germany is staring in disbelief at what is brewing in the constituencies. phunhoang
It is an election day unlike any the Federal Republic of Germany has ever experienced in its history. While polling stations across the country have opened their doors, the data and forecasts are painting a picture that goes far beyond a mere shift in the balance of political power.

We are witnessing the moment when Germany’s familiar political geography is literally breaking apart. A deep rift is running through the country, and the color blue is dominating the forecasts in a way that would have been considered unthinkable just a few years ago.
A look at the interactive constituency projections reveals a reality that many observers simply find “unfathomable.” When viewing the map of the 299 constituencies, one phenomenon immediately stands out: the entire eastern part of Germany is covered by a blue wave.
In the allocation of direct mandates, the competition in large parts of the new federal states appears almost hopeless. This development is putting massive pressure not only on the strategic planning of the CDU/CSU under Friedrich Merz, but also leaving the SPD of Chancellor Olaf Scholz facing a field of ruins.
Particularly explosive are the hypothetical scenarios of a direct vote for Chancellor. In a “five-person scenario” — consisting of Friedrich Merz, Alice Weidel, Olaf Scholz, Robert Habeck, and Sahra Wagenknecht — a dynamic emerges that must instill fear in Berlin’s political elite. In more than half of all constituencies, citizens would choose Alice Weidel if they could vote directly. This is no longer a local phenomenon, but a national turning point.
In regions like the Hochsauerlandkreis, Friedrich Merz may still appear as an unchallenged regional patriarch with a lead of over 40 percent, but the appearance of safety is deceptive. Just a few kilometers away, in the industrial centers of the Ruhr area, the facade of the people’s parties is crumbling.
In Duisburg, Gelsenkirchen, and Essen — cities that were traditionally considered the heartlands of social democracy — blue tendencies are gaining massive ground. These are often the hotspots where people are confronted daily with the downsides of current migration and security policy, and where they are now demanding a radical change of course.
Interestingly, there is clear regional fragmentation. While Karl Lauterbach in his Leverkusen constituency still seems secure with an estimated winning probability of around 74 percent, a more differentiated picture is emerging in other parts of the West. In the Rheinisch-Bergischer Kreis, the name Bosbach still appears to guarantee a CDU victory, with Caroline Bosbach following in her father’s footsteps.
However, such “islands of safety” are becoming rarer. On the other side of the spectrum, the Greens are still achieving successes in cities like Freiburg or Karlsruhe, yet the FDP seems to have been almost completely wiped off the map of direct mandates. For the Liberals, it is an unprecedented event in their history that not a single constituency can be won directly.
These statistical findings are more than just numbers; they are an expression of deep-seated frustration and a massive loss of trust in the government’s work. When Alice Weidel achieves leads of over 25 percent against her competitors in constituencies like Schwäbisch Hall or deep in the East, this is a clear signal from voters against the status quo. People are no longer just voting for a party — they are voting for a feeling of resistance against a policy that they perceive as far removed from their everyday reality.
This evening will show whether the forecasts of the “Blue Miracle” will become reality. One thing, however, is already certain: the era of political certainties is over. The cards are not only being reshuffled today — they are being used in an entirely new game. For Friedrich Merz and Olaf Scholz, it is nothing less than the political survival of their previous concepts that is at stake.
Germany stands at a crossroads whose effects will be felt for decades to come. The question is no longer whether the country will change, but how quickly and how radically this process will unfold. We will continue to follow the developments for you and deliver the first projections as soon as the polling stations close. It remains exciting until the very last second.














