Yuma Sun

Greens bid for German chanceller­y as Merkel’s Union bloc squabbles

- BY GEIR MOULSON

BERLIN – Germany’s environmen­talist Greens announced Monday that co-leader Annalena Baerbock will make the party’s first bid for the chanceller­y in the September national election, while Chancellor Angela Merkel’s center-right bloc was mired in a power struggle.

Baerbock’s nomination was unveiled by the party’s other co-leader, Robert Habeck, at a smoothly staged event that contrasted with the heated standoff in Merkel’s Union bloc.

The Sept. 26 parliament­ary elections are unpredicta­ble, partly because the popular incumbent isn’t seeking re-election. Merkel vowed in 2018 not to seek a fifth fouryear term. Recent polls have had the Greens running second behind the Union and ahead of Germany’s traditiona­l big center-left party, the Social Democrats.

Baerbock, 40, has been a lawmaker in the national parliament since 2013 but lacks government experience.

“Democracy lives on change,” Baerbock said. “Yes, I have never been chancellor or a minister. I stand for renewal, others stand for the status quo.”

She said she wants “a Germany at the heart of Europe, a country in which climate protection creates the future foundation for prosperity, freedom and security.”

Baerbock and Habeck have led the Greens since early 2018. A pragmatic and harmonious duo, they have presided over a rise in poll ratings. The Greens are in opposition nationally but sit in 11 of Germany’s 16 state government­s. Recent polls show support for the party of 20-22%, more than twice the 8.9% it won in the 2017 election.

The nomination of Baerbock, the youngest candidate to succeed Merkel and the only woman, needs endorsemen­t from a party congress in June. She is based in eastern Brandenbur­g state, a rural region where the Greens once struggled to make inroads but now are part of the local government. She studied political science and internatio­nal law in Hamburg and London.

The Greens last month unveiled a program to speed up Germany’s exit from coal-fired power, raise carbon prices and massively increase infrastruc­ture spending. They are pro-European Union and take a tough line toward Russia, calling for an end to the Nord Stream 2 gas pipeline project.

Baerbock said there needs to be a “joint, strong European position” toward Russia and China with a strong German contributi­on. “With authoritar­ian forces in particular, we have to have a clearly guided foreign policy ... in dialogue, and tough at the same time.”

Whatever the election outcome, the Greens may hold the key to forming Germany’s next government.

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