German centre-right European election winners, far-right AfD second

Germany's centre-right CDU/CSU alliance has won the European Parliament elections, with the far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD) coming in second, the national electoral authority confirmed early Monday after all votes were counted.

The preliminary results were in line with earlier projections.

German Chancellor Olaf Scholz's coalition suffered at the polls, with his Social Democrats (SPD) and his primary coalition partners domestically, the Greens, both trailing the AfD.

The opposition Christian Democrats (CDU) and their Bavarian sister party, the Christian Social Union (CSU), together garnered 30%.

The anti-immigrant, Eurosceptic AfD made significant gains, receiving 15.9% of the vote, up from 11% in the 2019 European elections.

That put the party ahead of Scholz's SPD, which posted 13.9% in what was the worst showing in a democratic nationwide election in more than a century for the centre-left party, which has historically been one of the dominant parties in German politics.

The Greens slipped to 11.9%, significantly down on their 2019 result of 20.5%, while junior coalition partner FDP received 5.2%.

The newly founded populist party Sahra Wagenknecht Alliance (BSW) hit 6.2%, while the far-left The Left party tumbled to just 2.7%.

In the AfD strongholds of eastern Germany, the populist far-right party led the field.

As in many other EU countries, observers had expected a significant boost in support for right-wing parties in the European Parliament elections. Some opinion polls had put support for the AfD at more than 20% a few months ago, but those figures fell significantly in the wake of a number of recent scandals involving the party.