Chancellor Angela Merkel's conservatives saw their lead over the main centre-left opposition party crumble in the sharpest one-week shift in German voter sentiment in seven years, an opinion poll showed today.
An eight point lead by Dr Merkel's Christian Democrats (CDU/CSU) over the centre-left Social Democrats (SPD) fell to just two points during a week that saw the chancellor face pressure over the euro crisis and domestic turmoil, according to the Emnid poll.
One party leader said the conservatives were also suffering from the after effects of a trouncing in a regional election on May 13th - though it was still too early to say whether the shift would have any impact on the next parliamentary vote, scheduled for 2013.
Support for the CDU and their Bavarian sister party, the Christian Social Union (CSU), fell three points to a seven-month low of 32 percent during the week up to May 23rd, according to the poll for Bild am Sonntag newspaper.
Support for the centre-left opposition Social Democrats rose three points to a five-month high of 30 per cent over the same period, the survey found.
Dr Merkel's conservatives had held a comfortable advantage over the SPD in polls since crushing the centre-left party in the last parliamentary election in 2009.
The current two-point lead is the narrowest since October 2011.The results came against a backdrop of rising pressure on Dr Merkel - from international partners and from opposition parties at home - to take bolder steps to boost growth in stricken euro zone members like Greece and Spain.
Adding to Dr Merkel's troubles were German media reports that the chancellor had been upstaged at last week's G8 summit in the United States by France's new president Francois Hollande.
There was also damaging media coverage of Dr Merkel's decision to fire environment minister Norbert Roettgen, who was blamed for the CDU's defeat in the regional election in Germany's most populous state North Rhine-Westphalia on May 13th.