Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Merkel makes a final push

- By David Rising

BERLIN — German Chancellor Angela Merkel urged her supporters to keep up the momentum in the final hours before Sunday’s national election, urging a last push to try to sway undecided voters.

Merkel is seeking a fourth term in office and her conservati­ve bloc of the Christian Democratic Party and Bavarian-only Christian Social union has a healthy lead in the polls.

Surveys in the last week show it leading with 34 to 37 percent support, followed by the Social Democrats with 21 to 22 percent.

Still, the support has been gradually eroding over the past week.

Merkel told supporters in Berlin on Saturday that they needed to keep up their efforts to sway undecided voters, saying “many make their decision in the final hours.”

After handing out coffee and chatting with the campaign workers in Berlin, Merkel headed north, walking through the streets of the city of Stralsund shaking hands, posing for photos and signing autographs.

She also campaigned in the northern city of Greifswald and planned a stop as well on the island of Ruegen in the Baltic.

Her main challenger, Social Democrat Martin Schulz, was at a rally in the city of Aachen.

“Regardless of how it turns out tomorrow, it was a great and wonderful campaign,” Schulz told the cheering crowd, who waved red Social Democratic and blue European flags, the dpa news agency reported.

At a rally Friday night in Berlin, Schulz urged Germans not to vote for the antimigran­t Alternativ­e for Germany party, known by its German initials AfD, which appears assured of gaining seats in the national parliament for the first time.

The nationalis­t party has 10 percent to 13 percent support in the polls.

In addition to the AfD, the Greens, the Free Democratic Party and the Left Party were all poised to enter parliament with poll numbers of 8 percent to 11 percent.

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