Times Colonist

Germany to elect new president

- GEIR MOULSON

BERLIN — A German parliament­ary assembly will elect the country’s new president today, with a respected former foreign minister who last year called U.S. President Donald Trump one of the world’s “hate preachers” the overwhelmi­ng favourite to win.

The German president has little executive power, but is considered an important moral authority. The new head of state will succeed Joachim Gauck, a 77-year-old former pastor and East German pro-democracy activist, who announced last year that he wouldn’t seek a second five-year term because of his age.

The president is elected by a special 1,260-member assembly made up of the 630 lawmakers in parliament’s lower house and an equal number of representa­tives from Germany’s 16 states.

Frank-Walter Steinmeier, Germany’s foreign minister until last month, has the support of Chancellor Angela Merkel’s “grand coalition” of centrerigh­t and centre-left parties.

Between them, Merkel’s conservati­ve Union bloc and the centre-left Social Democrats — her junior coalition partners — hold 923 seats, which should assure Steinmeier’s election.

Steinmeier, a Social Democrat, emerged as the government’s candidate after Merkel was unable to find a conservati­ve of presidenti­al stature willing to run for the job. He has long been one of Germany’s most popular politician­s, although he failed in a long-shot bid to unseat Merkel as chancellor in 2009.

The presidenti­al vote is likely to be one of the last moments of coalition unity ahead of a parliament­ary election in September in which Merkel is seeking a fourth term. Both sides hope to end the “grand coalition.”

Unlike Gauck, who has no party affiliatio­n, Steinmeier has had a long career in German politics. As former chancellor Gerhard Schroeder’s chief of staff, he was one of the main architects of Schroeder’s 2003 package of economic reforms and welfare cuts, which has been credited with making the German economy more robust.

Under Merkel, he served twice as foreign minister — from 2005 to 2009 and again from 2013 until this year, with a stint as opposition leader in between. He has won respect for his persistenc­e in trying to resolve the long-running crisis in Ukraine.

Steinmeier, 61, is typically studiously diplomatic, but strongly criticized Trump during the U.S. election campaign. Asked in August about the rise of right-wing populism in Germany and elsewhere, Steinmeier criticized those who “make politics with fear.” He cited the nationalis­t Alternativ­e for Germany party, the promoters of Britain’s exit from the European Union, and “the hate preachers, like Donald Trump at the moment in the United States.”

There are four other candidates in today’s election. The opposition Left Party nominated Christoph Butter-wegge, a political science professor who opposed Schroeder’s economic reforms. A deputy leader of Alternativ­e for Germany, Albrecht Glaser, also is running, as is Alexander Hold, nominated by the small Free Voters party in Bavaria, and Engelbert Sonneborn, the father of a satirist.

Meanwhile, the German government says 91 mosques were attacked in the country in 2016.

The interior ministry said in a report sent to the Associated Press that most attacks — 21 of them— took place in the western German state of North Rhine-Westphalia, which is the country’s most populous state with a high number of Muslim immigrants.

The report did not detail how badly the different mosques were vandalized. However, it said police identified suspects in 12 cases and made one arrest.

Attacks on mosques and Muslim migrants have been on the rise since the arrival of some 890,000 asylumseek­ers in 2015 caused a backlash and anti-Muslim sentiment in some parts of German society.

 ??  ?? German presidenti­al candidate Frank-Walter Steinmeier, centre, receives applause from Foreign Affairs Minister Sigmar Gabriel, left, and others at the Social Democrat’s parliament­ary group conference in Berlin.
German presidenti­al candidate Frank-Walter Steinmeier, centre, receives applause from Foreign Affairs Minister Sigmar Gabriel, left, and others at the Social Democrat’s parliament­ary group conference in Berlin.

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