Oman Daily Observer

Centrist Laschet picked to lead Merkel’s divided CDU party

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BERLIN: Germany’s Christian Democrats elected Armin Laschet as chairman on Saturday, aiming to unify their divided party behind a centrist who they hope can succeed Angela Merkel as chancellor when she steps down after federal elections in September.

Laschet, premier of Germany’s most populous state and the selfstyled Merkel continuity candidate, won a runoff ballot of party delegates against arch-conservati­ve Friedrich Merz.

Merkel, Europe’s predominan­t politician and a consistent winner with German voters since taking office in 2005, has said she will not run for chancellor again, and since she stepped down as CDU leader in December 2018, the party has struggled to find a suitable successor.

North Rhine-westphalia premier Laschet, who beat Merz by 521 votes to 466, said he would do everything he could to ensure the CDU and its Bavarian sister party, the Christian Social Union (CSU), could “stick together through this year.”

They could then work towards making sure that “the next chancellor in the federal elections will be from the (CDU/CSU) union,” he said in his victory speech.

Saturday’s digital election will be confirmed by a postal vote with legally binding results expected on January 22.

Merkel said last year that Laschet, 59, had “the tools” to run for chancellor, the closest she has come to endorsing anyone.

In his candidacy speech, Laschet

said the next leader’s task would be to earn trust for both himself and for the party and emphasised his ability to integrate all of its wings.

“I keep hearing that you also have to be able to polarise. I say: no, you don’t have to,” he told an empty convention­al hall, from which the congress was livestream­ed to delegates due to the pandemic.

“Woulda, coulda, shoulda’ is not politics. You have to master the tools of centrist politics, the ability to unite.”

But after his narrow run-off victory, Laschet must move swiftly to unite the party or risk eroding its support and leaving its in a weaker position to negotiate a coalition should it — as currently predicted — come first in September’s elections.

By tradition, the CDU chairman is usually — though not always — the chancellor candidate for the CDU and CSU, and the conservati­ve bloc is on course to win September’s federal ballot.

However, polls show Markus Soeder, the CSU leader, is the conservati­ve most favoured by voters. Some CDU lawmakers want dynamic Health Minister Jens Spahn to run for chancellor, though he backed Laschet for the party leadership.

Soeder was one of the first to congratula­te Laschet and said he was looking forward to working with him. “Together we will continue the Union’s success story,” he wrote on Twitter.

Soeder wants to give the new CDU leader time to win over voters and, with his help, unite the party — or else unravel.

He has called for the Union to decide on its chancellor candidate only after state elections in midmarch, leaving open the possibilit­y he could run if Laschet stumbles.

Finance Minister Olaf Scholz from the Social Democrats (SPD), junior partner in Merkel’s ruling coalition, wished Laschet luck for “the big task.”

“This year will be a challenge for all of us,” Scholz, who is the SPD candidate for chancellor, said on Twitter.

Laschet beats arch-conservati­ve Merz in runoff and is on course to run as chancellor candidate in September

 ?? — AFP ?? North Rhine-westphalia’s State Premier and new leader of the CDU Armin Laschet on stage with delegates after his election on the second day of the party’s 33rd congress held online because of the coronaviru­s pandemic in Berlin.
— AFP North Rhine-westphalia’s State Premier and new leader of the CDU Armin Laschet on stage with delegates after his election on the second day of the party’s 33rd congress held online because of the coronaviru­s pandemic in Berlin.

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