The CSSD would have gained 38 percent of the vote in mid-January, trailed by the ODS with 27.8 percent. This is for the first time in this election term that the gap between the CSSD and the ODS, whose voter preferences have been steadily declining, has exceeded ten percent. The junior opposition Communists (KSCM) Prague Mayor Bem most popular Czech politician - poll ...
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Platform for "bolshevisation" emerging in Czech Communist Party ... would gain 17.5 percent of the vote if elections were held now and the junior ruling Greens (SZ) 7.6 percent. The last party that would enter the Chamber of Deputies is the Christian Democratic Union (KDU-CSL), a junior governing partner, supported by 6.4 percent of those polled. The election turnout would be 59 percent, the poll showed. In the latest general election in mid-2006 the turnout was 64.5 percent. While the KSCM enjoy stable voter preferences, the two junior coalition parties have suffered heave losses in this respect recently. The share of undecided voters has more than doubled.
Over 20 percent of respondents said they do not know which party they would vote for. If the parties' potential election wins were transposed to lower house mandates, the CSSD would have 84 seats in the 200-seat house, the ODS 61 seats, the KSCM 34, the Greens 11 and the KDU-CSL 10 seats. A reliable majority of seats would be together held either by the CSSD and the KSCM, a centre-left coalition of the CSSD, the Greens and the KDU-CSL, or the grand coalition of the CSSD-ODS.
(Ceske Noviny)
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