Summary
Germany’s conservative CDU/CSU, led by Friedrich Merz, won around 29% of the vote in the snap general election, making Merz the frontrunner to form a ruling coalition.
The far-right AfD surged to 20%, nearly doubling its 2021 result, but remains politically isolated as major parties refuse to cooperate with it.
Chancellor Olaf Scholz’s Social Democrats suffered their worst result since WWII, while his coalition partners, the Greens and FDP, also lost support.
Merz faces challenges forming a government, addressing economic woes, and countering the AfD’s growing influence.
Those votes aren’t wasted. They receive additional funding to bolster the party and their future campaigns. They are however unrepresentative which is a shame but good things take time.