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CDU infighting breaks out amid poll setback

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BERLIN: German Chancellor Angela Merkel and her protege Annegret Kramp-karrenbaue­r are facing open criticism from fellow conservati­ves ater a state vote rout that threatens to blow open the question of who will run for chancellor in a 2021 election.

In a fourth electoral setback this year, the Christian Democrats (CDU) slumped into third place in the eastern state of Thuringia behind the far-right Alternativ­e for Germany (AFD) which won nearly a quarter of the votes.

The result, which Kramp-karrenbaue­r described as “biter,” has caused a split in the CDU over whether it should break a taboo and work with the radical Let party, which came first in the state election.

Senior German conservati­ve Friedrich Merz, still a potential conservati­ve chancellor candidate despite losing the party leadership contest to Kramp-karrenbaue­r last year, blasted Merkel, a long-time rival, and demanded change.

“The appearance of the whole German government is abysmal and something has to change,” Merz told ZDF television late on Monday. He blamed Merkel, saying a lack of leadership had cast a fog of inaction over the country for years.

“Most of all, it is the chancellor who is at the centre of the criticism,” he said, adding that he doubted the coalition would last two more years.

Merkel, who has led Europe’s biggest economy for 14 years, has said she will not stand for a fith term in 2021 but has tried to choreograp­h her exit from power by promoting her ally Krampkarre­nbauer.

Her strategy is unravellin­g.

Doubts have grown over Kramp-karrenbaue­r’s suitabilit­y as a chancellor candidate ater a series of mistakes. In addition, the fragile coalition with the Social Democrats (SPD), themselves in turmoil, may not last long beyond a leadership vote in December.

Head of the CDU’S youth wing Tilman Kuban has also renewed his demand for a ballot of members on who should be the next chancellor candidate, an affront to Kramp-karrenbaue­r who had hoped to be the party’s automatic choice.

“At the moment we have an open question about the leadership of the conservati­ve bloc,” he told ZDF.

Ater the dismal showing in Thuringia, where the CDU lost 11.7%, the party’s local leader Mike Mohring ruffled feathers in Berlin by indicating he may be willing to work with the Let party, seen by some as successors of East German Communists.

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CDU leader Annegret Krampkarre­nbauer and Angela Merkel congratula­te Mike Mohring in Berlin on Monday.
Reuters ↑ CDU leader Annegret Krampkarre­nbauer and Angela Merkel congratula­te Mike Mohring in Berlin on Monday.

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