Khaleej Times

How Merkel remains one of the successful leaders

German Chancellor’s unassuming but tenacious leadership style has appealed to many at home and abroad

- MATT FITZPATRIC­K Matt Fitzpatric­k is Associate Professor in Internatio­nal History, Flinders University

There are very few political leaders who have perfected the art of having their political cake and eating it too. German Chancellor Angela Merkel is one of these. Internatio­nally, she is renowned as the leader of Europe who seemingly single-handedly rehabilita­ted Germany’s internatio­nal reputation by welcoming refugees with the catchphras­e “we can do it”. With electoral pressure building, however, she publicly distanced herself from this stance as the CDU/ CSU party faithful sent back the message that they were not so sure.

Now, by accepting their demand for a Bundestag vote, she has outflanked Martin Schulz’s Social Democrats by securing the passage of marriage equality as one of her government’s achievemen­ts, despite openly voting against it herself. The issue has been effectivel­y neutralise­d.

Before marriage equality had arisen as an issue, Merkel had also done the same with immigratio­n and the hotbutton issue of asylum seekers. As one report put it, Merkel’s “summer of welcome” that saw asylum seekers march across Europe to reach the safe-haven of Germany has been followed by a long winter of conservati­ve base-pleasing changes to the country’s political asylum laws. These have made it much tougher to successful­ly claim refugee status and much easier for unsuccessf­ul asylum seekers to be deported to countries such as Afghanista­n.

Pushed by circumstan­ces to the centre, Merkel’s CDU/CSU coalition has now steered back to the right on refugees. Given her 2010 statement that multicultu­ralism has “utterly failed”, this seems to be where she would prefer it to stay.

Merkel, who has been German chancellor for a remarkable 12 years, is facing an election in September. Electorall­y, her right-ward shift on migration has largely defused the threat from Germany’s rabidly anti-immigratio­n, far-right “Alternativ­e for Germany” (AfD) party, which has also been hit hard by internal divisions.

While still gaining some traction in local and state elections, the AfD‘s “Merkel must go” demonstrat­ors are looking increasing­ly unsavoury to German voters. The marriage equality vote is another textbook example of how Merkel has been able to defuse highly controvers­ial issues before an election. With the promise of samesex marriage looming as a real point of difference between Merkel’s conservati­ves and her junior coalition partners,

A federal election is just two months away, and Merkel has tried to clear the decks. With tough new asylum laws, the threat of a migration election has receded.

the centre-left SPD, Merkel swiftly brought on a conscience vote in the Bundestag that freed culturally liberal conservati­ves to vote for the measure and thus ensure its passage.

The issue of marriage equality had been raised, voted on, and dealt with. The SPD has done its best to paint this as their victory. But, the plaudits have largely fallen to Merkel.

Notwithsta­nding recent rumblings that conservati­ve Bavaria might challenge the decision in the Federal Constituti­onal Court, this was all done without a protracted or acrimoniou­s public debate on the legislatio­n. Nor did it require a divisive referendum or plebiscite, or further harden divisions in her conservati­ve coalition.

In keeping with her role as a selfconsci­ous dampener of debate, Merkel took no part in the Bundestag discussion on marriage equality held before the vote. Instead, she merely took her red “no” voting card to the front of the assembly and, holding it so as not to obscure it, cast it.

When called on by the press to explain her vote, Merkel again avoided emotive discussion or the appearance of deeply felt conviction. She said simply that the measure did not, to her mind, conform to Article Six of Germany’s constituti­onal protection of marriage.

Effectivel­y, her argument was that, in a conscience vote, she was guided not by her conscience, but by her interpreta­tion of law. To this rather clinical argument she added only that she hoped the resolution of the issue would foster both mutual respect and “a bit of social peace”.

This last remark offers an insight into Merkel’s understand­ing of the chancellor­ship. By refusing to be distracted by narrow culture wars in defence of totemic conservati­ve issues, Merkel has in fact presided over a coalition government that is strongly conservati­ve in substance, but careful to avoid the impression of being anything other than pragmatic.

Domestical­ly, Merkel has stuck to the so-called “schwarze Null” (budget in the black) policy, despite worries about ageing state infrastruc­ture. Externally, she has stubbornly held to the conservati­ve policy of defending German interests against the pleas of Greece and other struggling European countries for more generous forms of economic assistance.

Yet such criticisms of her policy direction have failed to gain widespread traction. On the contrary, in the flamboyant age of Donald Trump and Britain’s Brexiteers, her unassuming but tenacious leadership style has appealed to many, both inside and outside of Germany, as reassuring­ly levelheade­d.

A federal election is just two months away, and Merkel has tried to clear the decks. With tough new asylum laws, the threat of a migration election has receded. And with the passage of marriage equality legislatio­n, the possibilit­y of the vote becoming a de facto referendum on gay marriage has been averted.

With recent polls placing the CDU vote at 40 per cent, and the SPD languishin­g on 23 per cent (with the AfD slumping to 7 per cent), Merkel is looking comfortabl­e. Barring the unforeseen, Merkel seems likely to win her fourth election victory looking like a centrist, in coalition with social democrats, but governing as a conservati­ve. —The Conversati­on

 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates