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Voting ends in Germany in a tight race.

The voting is done, and exit polling throughout the day has suggested that the Social Democrats and the Christian Democratic Union are very close.

Early-morning voters in Munich. In a sign that the closest election in years had mobilized voters, turnout was expected to surpass the 76 percent recorded in 2017, when the last national elections were held.Credit...Laetitia Vancon for The New York Times

The polls have now closed in Germany, where voters have been casting their ballots for a new Parliament, which will ultimately determine who succeeds Chancellor Angela Merkel at the helm of the European Union’s most populous democracy after 16 years in office.

Early exit polls throughout the day have suggested a very tight race between Ms. Merkel’s center-right Christian Democratic Union and the center-left Social Democrats. Most have showed the Social Democrats slightly ahead, but in at least one the Christian Democrats had the edge. A couple had them tied.

Exit polling in this election is complicated by the fact that about four in ten voters have already mailed in their ballots.

The first returns are expected within a couple of hours, although a final result may not be known until Monday.

In a sign that the closest election in years was mobilizing voters, turnout was expected to surpass the 76 percent recorded in 2017, when the last national elections were held.

“It’s a nail biter,” said Andrea Römmele, dean of the Hertie School in Berlin.

Katrin Bennhold is the Berlin bureau chief. Previously she reported from London and Paris, covering a range of topics from the rise of populism to gender. More about Katrin Bennhold

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