The News (New Glasgow)

Merkel brings possible successor to Berlin

- BY FRANK JORDANS

Chancellor Angela Merkel proposed Monday that the governor of Germany’s tiny western state of Saarland run her party’s dayto-day operations — putting her in prime position eventually to succeed Merkel as leader of the centre-right Christian Democratic Union.

Merkel said she wants the party to elect Annegret KrampKarre­nbauer to the post of general-secretary next Monday. The party’s current general-secretary, Peter Tauber, is stepping down after facing health issues.

Speaking alongside KrampKarre­nbauer at the party’s headquarte­rs in Berlin, Merkel said the 55-year-old Catholic would bring a lot of experience and credibilit­y to the role at a time when the Christian Democrats are under pressure to define their political positions.

Conservati­ve voters have abandoned the party in recent years, partly over Merkel’s welcoming stance on immigratio­n, even though it still came first in last September’s election with almost 33 per cent of the vote.

“We are experienci­ng one of the most difficult political phases in the history of (post-war) Germany,” Kramp-Karrenbaue­r told reporters, explaining why she was willing to leave her post as governor of one of Germany’s 16 states to devote her energy to the party’s headquarte­rs in Berlin.

Kramp-Karrenbaue­r has been governor of Saarland on Germany’s western border with France and Luxembourg since 2011. During that time she worked to make French a second language in the state and improve economic, cultural and political ties with France.

Merkel was elected general-secretary in 1998, a role that traditiona­lly involves managing the party’s campaigns and developing its political messages. Merkel went from general-secretary to party leader in 2000, and becoming Germany’s chancellor five years later.

Asked whether she considered herself Merkel’s “crown princess” now, Kramp-Karrenbaue­r — who is often referred to by her acronym A.K.K. in German media — said: “I was never suited for princess roles.”

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