Over the last month the far-right AfD has risen sharply in the polls.
https://www.politico.eu/europe-poll-of-polls/germany/
Is this a permanent change in Germany's political landscape?
@BrunoParga Especially in german contexts I would use "radical" for any position far from the center and "extremist" for unconstitutional positions opposing the liberal democratic basic order (see also https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Radikalismus#Definition_durch_den_bundesdeutschen_Verfassungsschutz)
@BrunoParga The AfD is a radical far-right party. The German word is 'Rechtsextremismus' - right wing extremism. They have nothing to do with liberalism. They reject the liberal and democratic basic order. Trying to frame them to be in the center of anything is naïve at best.
@GrassomannGrassomann okay, I guess it's just a different historical development of the terms then. Vielen Dank!
@AlexbGoode I never equated the horrible, horrible AfD with a perfectly reasonable political position like centrist liberalism. What I said was that, from my point of view, the word "radical" does not apply to the AfD, because they are not in any way centrist liberals and that is what the word means to me. Grassomann has clarified that the word is used differently in Germany and that's okay, words don't have intrinsic definitions, they only mean what people use them to mean.
Screw the AfD (and their left-wing counterparts, the Left).
@Joern If the AfD does not participate they will get 0 votes. Since there are no negative votes this means this question will resolve no.
@AlexbGoode actually something can be zero if there is something to count. If AFD is not allowed to participiate in the elections by regulation, the number of votes is N/A, as should your resolution be in that case
@SKy The question in the title is "Will the radical right AfD get more votes than the social democrats in Germany's next federal election?".
If the AfD does not participate, you can argue there is no number of votes (N/A, as you say) -- but the market should still resolve no: it is not true that N/A > (number of SPD votes), even though N/A < (number of SPD votes) is not true either.