Oman Daily Observer

Scrum for Merkel job opens wounds

- KIT HOLDEN

A bruising internal struggle to succeed Chancellor Angela Merkel has left Germany’s once stable ruling conservati­ves in disarray and on the brink of implosion less than six months ahead of elections in September.

The fight between long-time Merkel-ally Armin Laschet and his more popular Bavarian rival Markus Soeder threatens to further destabilis­e the once dominant CDU/CSU alliance, whose poll ratings have plummeted in recent months.

Elected head of Merkel’s Christian Democratic Union in January, Laschet would usually be the first choice to lead both the CDU and its Bavarian sister party CSU into September’s general election.

Yet his claim to be chancellor candidate has been bitterly contested by CSU leader Soeder, who currently commands more support from both the public and conservati­ve lawmakers.

The scrap for Merkel’s throne has opened up historic wounds between the two parties and could even loosen their 16-year grip on the chanceller­y.

With the clock ticking down to September 26 elections, the bitter divisions poisoning the conservati­ves spell a rocky campaign ahead for a post-merkel era.

It also leaves them exposed, with the internal squabbles sapping attention at a time when Europe’s biggest economy is struggling to end a raging pandemic that has killed 80,000 and ravaged thousands of businesses and livelihood­s.

HISTORIC SQUABBLES

“The CDU/CSU has not seen a showdown like this for more than 40 years!” wrote Bild newspaper after Soeder and Laschet exchanged verbal blows in a meeting with conservati­ve MPS.

Yet it is by no means the first time that the CDU and CSU have been at odds over who should take the top job.

In 1980, CSU leader Franz-josef Strauss was nominated ahead of CDU candidate Ernst Albrecht and his then unpopular party leader Helmut Kohl.

In 2002, meanwhile, the newly appointed CDU chair Angela Merkel stepped back to allow Bavarian rival Edmund Stoiber to run.

In both cases, the CSU candidate was widely seen as a more charismati­c and voter-friendly option, before being ultimately beaten in the polls by the incumbent social-democrats.

Both Kohl and Merkel then defied their critics at the next elections, going on to become Germany’s longestser­ving chancellor­s.

THE SCRAP FOR MERKEL’S THRONE HAS OPENED UP HISTORIC WOUNDS BETWEEN THE TWO PARTIES AND COULD EVEN LOOSEN THEIR 16-YEAR GRIP ON THE CHANCELLER­Y

 ?? — AFP ?? German Chancellor Angela Merkel leaves the plenary hall during a session of the Bundestag on Saturday in Berlin.
— AFP German Chancellor Angela Merkel leaves the plenary hall during a session of the Bundestag on Saturday in Berlin.

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