Rejection of immigrants from Islamic countries has increased in Germany. An absolute majority of 52 per cent (rather) agree with the statement that “Germany should generally no longer accept refugees from Islamic countries”. This is the result of a representative Insa survey commissioned by the Nius portal. 34 per cent say “disagree” or “tend to disagree”.
There is even greater agreement with this statement: “In certain areas of my town or village, I have the feeling that I am no longer in Germany.” 57 per cent agree, 36 per cent do not share this feeling.
This also gives rise to the concern of becoming a minority in one’s own country. 54 per cent of respondents say they are “afraid that Germans will become a minority in Germany”. 37 per cent see it differently.
A relative majority support the theory of a population exchange, which is categorised as right-wing extremist by the Office for the Protection of the Constitution. 45 per cent think: “I believe that Europeans will gradually be replaced by immigrants from Africa and the Middle East.” 41 per cent reject the statement.
The responses to the question of whether “migrants have largely integrated well in Germany” are also unambiguous.
58 per cent say no, 29 per cent think the opposite.
Germans are most likely to agree with the statement “The current migration is overburdening the German school system”. At 75 per cent, three quarters of respondents are convinced that this is the case. 22 per cent cannot see any overload.
Insa interviewed a representative sample of 2,004 eligible voters aged 18 and over for the survey from April 26 to 29.
Mehrheit der Deutschen will keine muslimischen Zuwanderer mehr (jungefreiheit.de)