El Dorado News-Times

German ruling party picks new leader

Choice of governor seen as sign of continuity as Merkel prepares to end tenure

- GEIR MOULSON

BERLIN — Chancellor Angela Merkel’s center-right party chose Armin Laschet, the pragmatic governor of Germany’s most populous state, as its new leader Saturday. The choice sent a signal of continuity months before an election in which voters will decide who becomes the new chancellor.

Laschet will have to build unity in the Christian Democratic Union, Germany’s strongest party, after beating more conservati­ve rival Friedrich Merz. And he will need to plunge straight into an electoral marathon that culminates with the Sept. 26 national vote for the next parliament.

The decision by party delegates Saturday isn’t the final word on who will run as the center-right candidate to succeed Merkel as chancellor, but Laschet will either run himself or have a big say in who does. He said the candidate will be chosen in April.

Laschet, 59, was elected in 2017 as governor of North Rhine-Westphalia state, a traditiona­l center-left stronghold.

He governs the region in a coalition with the pro-business Free Democrats, the Christian Democratic Union’s traditiona­l ally, but he would likely be able to work smoothly with a more liberal partner as well. Current polls point to the environmen­talist Greens as a likely key to power in the September election.

Laschet pointed Saturday to the value of continuity and moderation, and cited the storming of the U.S. Capitol by supporters of President Donald Trump as an example of where polarizati­on can lead.

“Trust is what keeps us going and what has been broken in America,” he told delegates before they voted to make him him the Christian Democratic Union’s leader. “By polarizing, sowing discord and distrust, and systematic­ally lying, a president has destroyed stability and trust.”

“We must speak clearly but not polarize,” Laschet said. “We must be able to integrate, hold society together.”

He said the party needs “the continuity of success” and “will only win if we remain strong in the middle of society.”

Laschet said “there are many people who, above all, find Angela Merkel good and only after that the [Christian Democratic Union].” He added that “we need this trust now as a party” and must work to gain it.

Laschet beat Merz, a former rival of Merkel who was making his second attempt in recent years to win the party leadership, by 521 votes to 466. A third candidate, prominent lawmaker Norbert Roettgen, was eliminated in a first round of voting.

Merz’s sizeable support suggests that a strong contingent would like a sharper conservati­ve profile after the Merkel years. She has led Germany since 2005 but said over two years ago that she wouldn’t seek a fifth term as chancellor.

Merkel, 66, has enjoyed enduring popularity with voters as she steered Germany and Europe through a series of crises. But she repeatedly abandoned orthodox conservati­ve policies, for example by accelerati­ng Germany’s exit from nuclear energy and ending military conscripti­on.

Her decision in 2015 to allow in large numbers of migrants caused major tensions on the center-right and strengthen­ed the far-right Alternativ­e for Germany party.

Laschet called for unity after Saturday’s vote and said Merz remains “an important personalit­y for us.”

“All the questions that will face us after the pandemic need a broad consensus in our party,” he said. “And we will need this consensus for all the elections that are ahead of us, too. Everyone will be against us.”

Laschet, a miner’s son who served as a member of the European Parliament from 1999 to 2005, shouldn’t expect much of a honeymoon in his new job. In addition to the national election, Germany is holding six state elections this year, the first two in midMarch.

Saturday’s result in an online vote will now be officially endorsed in a postal ballot. That is expected to be a formality but is required by German law.

 ?? (AP/Odd Andersen) ?? Armin Laschet, governor of Germany’s North Rhine-Westphalia state, delivers a speech Saturday during the Christian Democratic Union’s virtual congress, showing a coin offered by his father for luck.
(AP/Odd Andersen) Armin Laschet, governor of Germany’s North Rhine-Westphalia state, delivers a speech Saturday during the Christian Democratic Union’s virtual congress, showing a coin offered by his father for luck.

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