Chancellor candidates from major German parties as well as other politicians arrived for the final televised debate at the Deutsche Telekom AG headquarters, Berlin, Thursday.
All major candidates and other politicians were seen arriving including the Green party's Annalena Baerbock, AfD's Alice Weidel, Janine Wissler from Die Linke, CSU's Markus Soder, SPD's Olaf Scholz, CDU candidate Armin Laschet and FDP's Christian Lindner.
The debate will be broadcast live on the German public TV channels ZDF and ARD.
Germany's general election takes place on Sunday, September 26. According to recent polls published on Thursday, SPD is still leading with 25 percent with the CDU and CSU having 21 percent. The Green party comes in at 16 percent. The AfD fell by one point to 11 percent, while Die Linke improved to 7 percent. FDP remains at 11percent.
Chancellor candidates from major German parties as well as other politicians arrived for the final televised debate at the Deutsche Telekom AG headquarters, Berlin, Thursday.
All major candidates and other politicians were seen arriving including the Green party's Annalena Baerbock, AfD's Alice Weidel, Janine Wissler from Die Linke, CSU's Markus Soder, SPD's Olaf Scholz, CDU candidate Armin Laschet and FDP's Christian Lindner.
The debate will be broadcast live on the German public TV channels ZDF and ARD.
Germany's general election takes place on Sunday, September 26. According to recent polls published on Thursday, SPD is still leading with 25 percent with the CDU and CSU having 21 percent. The Green party comes in at 16 percent. The AfD fell by one point to 11 percent, while Die Linke improved to 7 percent. FDP remains at 11percent.
Chancellor candidates from major German parties as well as other politicians arrived for the final televised debate at the Deutsche Telekom AG headquarters, Berlin, Thursday.
All major candidates and other politicians were seen arriving including the Green party's Annalena Baerbock, AfD's Alice Weidel, Janine Wissler from Die Linke, CSU's Markus Soder, SPD's Olaf Scholz, CDU candidate Armin Laschet and FDP's Christian Lindner.
The debate will be broadcast live on the German public TV channels ZDF and ARD.
Germany's general election takes place on Sunday, September 26. According to recent polls published on Thursday, SPD is still leading with 25 percent with the CDU and CSU having 21 percent. The Green party comes in at 16 percent. The AfD fell by one point to 11 percent, while Die Linke improved to 7 percent. FDP remains at 11percent.