The German party NPD is the most known actor in nationwide politics that you can define as radical right-winged. The followers of this party are distributed heterogeneously in the country, which means that the NPD has much “better” results in the eastern part of Germany and especially in the countryside. Usually you can observe that in big cities small parties like the ecological Die Grünen and the internet phenomenon Piratenpartei tend to score better percentages than in the countryside.





I decided to visualize the results of the last federal election (Bundestagswahl 2013) with a focus on the bad guys which will here be defined by their vote for the NPD. The website www.bundeswahlleiter.de offers detailed data related to the bygone election. For the visualization we need geodata which contains the information of geometry and attributes. Thus, we can use the provided Shapefile data of the 299 election districts. This data can be connected to our attribute data, which is the table of the election results that is in CSV-format. Both datasets are downloadable on the mentioned website.





After data cleaning with Excel or OpenOffice, the CSV table can be imported in QGIS and then joined to the election districts by using the Join function and connecting the data through the election district ID. A quick check whether the intuition about the heterogeneous distribution of the party’s follwers can now be made by visualizing the results with the graduated symbology option in QGIS.









As we can see, the data seems to reflect the thesis of an allocation of bad guys in the eastern part of Germany.





We could now stop our work and finish with a clear and simple output that supports our thesis. Nevertheless, this kind of visualization is quite boring and will not necessarily catch our audience’s attention.





Therefore, I decided to create a cartogram. Cartograms distort the geometry of each feature according to an attribute value. There are several beautiful cartograms that for example show the size of each country according to its population/wealth/beer consume and so on.





By using the awesome GIS programme ScapeToad 1.1 ( www.scapetoad.choros.ch ) we can easily use the number of electorates and the number of votes for the NPD to create two cartograms. The cartogram that is based on the electorate shows the size of each election district according to the number of eligible voters, the other one should show the size in relation to the actual votes for the NPD.

ScapeToad offers also to generate a distorted grid for every cartogram and the option to export our outcomes in Shapefile format. Thus, we can now finish our map by working on the styling and using the new Print Composer. I decided to colour the election circles with high population to highlight major cities so we can examine the differences in distortion between cities and the countryside.





Click to enlarge

