San Francisco Chronicle

End of an era as Scholz is set to replace Merkel

- By Geir Moulson Geir Moulson is an Associated Press writer.

BERLIN — Olaf Scholz is set to become post-World War II Germany’s ninth chancellor, crowning a career that has seen him serve in a string of top government posts, after leading his party to an election comeback that appeared hugely unlikely just a few months ago.

The 63-year-old on Wednesday sealed a deal for his centerleft Social Democrats to lead Germany’s next government in a coalition with the environmen­talist Greens and the probusines­s Free Democrats. The agreement followed relatively quick talks that were discipline­d and discreet, qualities that reflect Scholz’s own image.

Scholz has a terse, no-nonsense approach typical of his home city of Hamburg, where he once worked as a lawyer — an even more sober style than that of outgoing Chancellor Angela Merkel. He joined the Social Democratic Party at 17 and was first elected to parliament in 1998.

He is unflappabl­e and unshakably self-confident, but no master of rhetoric. During a turbulent stint as the Social Democrats’ general secretary in the early 2000s, he earned the nickname “Scholzomat” for what critics said was a habit of constantly repeating the same phrases in support of thenChance­llor Gerhard Schroeder’s welfare-state trims and economic reforms, which faced dissent within the party.

Scholz’s experience, attention to detail and sometimes technocrat­ic image became an asset during this year’s election campaign, in which he led the long-struggling Social Democrats from third place in polls to a narrow win in the Sept. 26 election.

He was helped by a series of gaffes and slips by his two opponents — Armin Laschet, leader of Merkel’s center-right Christian Democrats, and Annalena Baerbock, who was making the Greens’ first run for the chanceller­y.

The Social Democrats’ stock rose as Scholz, the finance minister and vice chancellor in Merkel’s government, calmly ran through a largely accidentfr­ee campaign and turned in unspectacu­lar but solid performanc­es in three televised preelectio­n debates.

He also appeared to portray himself as Merkel’s natural successor, although he belongs to a different party. At one point, he posed with the outgoing chancellor’s trademark “Merkel diamond” foldedhand­s gesture in an “interview without words” for the daily Sueddeutsc­he Zeitung.

Scholz first served in the national government from 2007-2009 as Merkel’s labor minister, during the global financial crisis.

 ?? Michele Tantussi / Getty Images ?? Chancellor Angela Merkel receives a bouquet of flowers from Olaf Scholz at a weekly cabinet meeting in Berlin. Scholz is set to become post-World War II Germany’s ninth chancellor.
Michele Tantussi / Getty Images Chancellor Angela Merkel receives a bouquet of flowers from Olaf Scholz at a weekly cabinet meeting in Berlin. Scholz is set to become post-World War II Germany’s ninth chancellor.

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