The Pak Banker

Merkel seeks to boost Laschet in close German election race

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Outgoing Chancellor Angela Merkel sought to boost struggling would-be successor Armin Laschet in the tight race to become Germany's next leader, telling a rally in her longtime electoral district that he will look out for jobs and security.

Merkel touted her government's record in bringing down unemployme­nt and Germany's debt, decrying plans by Laschet's rivals to raise taxes. She also suggested there was a danger of a left-wing German government being overly generous in giving financial help to more indebted European countries.

"There is a lot at stake on Sunday," she told the crowd on a wet evening in Stralsund, in Germany's northeaste­rn corner. "It's about whether ... we give people who want to create jobs, companies that want to contribute something to Germany's prosperity, the chance, the freedom" to do so. The alternativ­e, she added, is "a policy of only thinking of redistribu­ting, but not creating" wealth.

"I know Armin Laschet, as governor of North RhineWestp­halia, fights for every single job in his state, and he would also do that as chancellor of Germany," Merkel said. As Merkel's center-right Union bloc has sagged in polls over recent weeks, Laschet and other leaders have issued constant warnings that the center-left Social Democrats and the environmen­talist Greens, their rivals to put forth Germany's next leader, would form a coalition with the hard-left Left Party.

Whether that is realistic is questionab­le, in view of those two parties' deep difference­s with the Left Party on foreign policy in particular, though neither

Social Democrat candidate Olaf Scholz nor Green candidate Annalena Baerbock have ruled it out. With five days to go, polls show Merkel's Union bloc slightly behind the Social Democrats, who have benefited from the relative popularity of Scholz Germany's finance minister and their candidate to succeed Merkel - to pull out of a longtime poll slump.

They show support for the Union a little above 20% after divisions over who would run for chancellor, as well as missteps by Laschet. They put the Greens in third place.

Laschet joined Merkel in the district that she has represente­d in parliament since the 1990 election that followed German reunificat­ion, paying tribute to her record as chancellor. Merkel, he said, "has led us well through four major crises" in her 16-year tenure.

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