Infratest dimap
SWR
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SWR
1158 respondents
The next General election in Rhineland-Palatinate takes place in -7.4447888199074 days.
Based on the Infratest dimap projection, the incumbent governing parties would currently secure 38.6% of the parliamentary seats.
In the latest opinion poll for the election in Rhineland-Palatinate, conducted by Infratest dimap on February 24, 2026, CDU leads with 28%. Trailing behind are SPD: 27%, AfD: 19%, Grüne: 9%, Freie Wähler: 5% and Die Linke: 5%. Other parties secure 7% of the votes.
Infratest dimap achieved a PolitPro Score of 85 out of 100.
On average, Infratest dimap's figures deviate by 1.5 percentage points between their final pre-election polls and actual election results.
In 28% of polls, Infratest dimap rated Freie Wähler higher than the PolitPro Election Trend (average of all institutes).
The electoral threshold for the Rhineland-Palatinate election is 5%.
According to data from Infratest dimap, 5 parties are projected to surpass the electoral threshold and enter the Rhineland-Palatinate parliament: CDU with 33 representatives, SPD with 30 representatives, AfD with 20 representatives, Grüne with 11 representatives and Die Linke with 7 representatives.
Rhineland-Palatinate employs a dual-vote electoral system, utilizing both 'constituency votes' (Wahlkreisstimme) and 'state list votes' (Landesstimme). This system is designed to allocate 101 parliamentary seats. A key feature is the Sainte-Laguë method, which ensures highly proportional representation of voter preferences. The state prioritizes robust regional representation, achieved by linking constituency and state lists.
Rhineland-Palatinate strictly enforces a five-percent electoral threshold. Recently, smaller parties like the Freie Wähler (Free Voters) have proven that strong regional roots can enable them to clear this 5% hurdle, even within a stable party system. No basic mandate clause exists.
Rhineland-Palatinate gained prominence for its 'traffic light coalition' (SPD, Greens, FDP), a model successfully implemented here well before its adoption at the federal level. Government formation in Mainz is defined by a culture of dialogue and compromise, fostering significant political stability within the state.