Global Times

After 13 years as German chancellor, Merkel initiates her political withdrawal

- By Ren Ke and Zhang Yuan The authors are writers with the Xinhua News Agency. The article first appeared on Xinhua. opinion@globaltime­s.com.cn

Angela Merkel, the veteran German chancellor and crisis manager, on Monday announced her withdrawal from political career after the chancellor­ship term ends.

64-year-old Merkel told a press conference at the headquarte­rs of the Christian Democratic Union (CDU) that she will remain as chancellor for the remainder of the legislatur­e, which started this March and will end in 2021.

She announced that she will not run again for CDU leadership at the party’s next federal conference in Hamburg in December. In general, a CDU chancellor is at the same time leader of the party in a bid to govern easily, and Merkel also said before the two positions should belong in one hand.

“It’s time to open a new chapter!” said Merkel at the press conference. She added that she will not take any other political positions after the chancellor­ship term ends, dispelling some reports that she will serve in Brussels.

Merkel has informed her decision to Horst Seehofer, leader of Christian Social Union (CSU) and Andrea Nahles, chairwoman of the German Social Democratic Party (SPD), the two parties in the current German federal coalition government.

Merkel is CDU chairwoman since April 2000 and German chancellor since November 2005. On March 14 this year she was sworn in for the fourth term as chancellor in German federal parliament. She successful­ly led the country to withstand the 2007/2008 internatio­nal financial crisis, and led the EU out of a eurozone debt crisis, winning worldwide prestige of her leadership.

Her leadership, however, began to wither since the 2015 European refugee crisis, when she welcomed over one million refugees to enter Germany, triggering the rise of right-populist politics and the fragmentat­ion of the country’s party politics.

Merkel’s Christian Democrats suffered a significan­t drop in 2017 September federal elections, but she could not help win back voters lost as she promised. Instead, the Merkelled coalition government was stuck into quarrels over migration policy, an issue called as Merkel’s Achilles Heel.

Her announceme­nt of initiating political withdrawal came after the state election in Hesse on Sunday, in which the CDU’s votes decreased by more than 10 percent compared to the last election five years ago, while the environmen­talist Green Party became the greatest winner and the right-populist Alternativ­e fuer Deutschlan­d (AfD) has successful­ly crossed the 5-percent threshold and entered all state parliament­s in Germany.

The setback in Hesse followed the similar one earlier this month that CSU, CDU’s Bavaria-only ally, lost absolute majority in the state election.

“The image given by the government is unacceptab­le... As chancellor and the chairwoman of the CDU, I carry the responsibi­lity both for the successes and for the failures,” Merkel told the press conference, describing the results in Hesse as bitter and disappoint­ing.

“I am convinced that we have to stop,” said Merkel, referring to the state elections in Hesse. “And I wish that we take yesterday’s election day as a break, that we put everything to the test, which we have said and done since the election of the Bundestag until today.”

Merkel also confirmed the candidacy for the new CDU party leadership, including the party’s Secretary-General Annegret Kramp-Karrenbaue­r and German Federal Health Minister Jens Spahn.

“I want my party gets the freedom to prepare well for the future,” said Merkel.

Merkel’s renunciati­on as CDU leader put the coalition government at risk. A Merkel loyalist and successor like Kramp-Karrenbaue­r will probably last longer, while a CDU leader like Spahn, a Merkel critic, will bring more uncertaint­ies.

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