Toronto Star

Merkel to give up leadership of party

State election slump is a ‘turning point,’ German chancellor says

- JOERG BLANK

Germany’s veteran leader Chancellor Angela Merkel announced on Monday that she will step down when her current term expires in 2021, kicking off a race for the top job in Europe’s biggest economy. Although there had been widespread speculatio­n about the end of the Merkel era, the shock announceme­nt came after a drubbing for her conservati­ve bloc in state elections in Hesse and Bavaria, and after months of infighting in her three-way coalition government.

Merkel, who has been chancellor for nearly 13 years, said during a news conference that she would give up the leadership of her Christian Democratic Union (CDU) at a December party congress, and will also not run again for parliament or another term as chancellor.

Describing the elections in the state of Hesse on the weekend as a “turning point,” Merkel gave a dim assessment of her government’s work so far.

“Things can’t go on like this. The image that the government is presenting is unacceptab­le,” she said. “This decision is my contributi­on so that the coalition can focus its efforts on good governance,” she said after a meeting of her party executive in Berlin.

The decision to step down as party leader is a major U-turn for Merkel, who previously stated the top job was inseparabl­e from the party leadership.

Separating the two was “a gamble,” she said, adding that the risk was justifiabl­e.

Asked by reporters if she was now a lame-duck chancellor, she replied: “This is not unusual in internatio­nal politics and they govern well nonetheles­s.”

Three candidates have come forward to replace her as party chair, Merkel and party sources said: Jens Spahn, Germany’s current health minister and a Merkel critic; Friedrich Merz, the former head of the conservati­ve bloc in the Bundestag; and Annegret Kramp-Karrenbaue­r, the CDU secretary general and one of Merkel’s allies.

On Sunday, the CDU saw its support slump more than 10 points in the state of Hesse. On Oct. 14, the CDU’s sister party, the Christian Social Union (CSU), saw a similar loss in its home state of Bavaria.

The CDU is due to elect a new leader at its party conference in December. It was previously expected that Merkel, who has chaired the party since 2000, would once again put herself forward.

Merkel’s federal-level coalition partners, the centre-left Social Democrats (SPD), also suffered humiliatin­g slumps of around10 points in this month’s state polls, and the chancellor’s decision to give up the party leadership could increase pressure on the SPD to seek its own new leader.

Constant infighting between the coalition parties has been blamed for the poor results in Hesse and Bavaria.

Current SPD chief Andrea Nahles pointed the finger at the conservati­ves for the government’s woes, particular­ly at Interior Minister Horst Seehofer, who has repeatedly sparred with Merkel over immigratio­n policy.

Seehofer himself said that he was sorry to hear of Merkel’s decision. “It is a shame. I emphatical­ly say: It is a shame,” he said.

He had worked with Merkel for the past 30 years, which was a “very, very long and productive time,” he said.

“We should not forget that she was the first woman to lead the CDU in this place that is so often dominated by men,” Green Party co-chair Annalena Baerbock said, adding that Merkel opened her party up to “a modern image of society ... And for this, we owe her respect.”

 ??  ?? German Chancellor Angela Merkel vowed to finish out her term in 2021.
German Chancellor Angela Merkel vowed to finish out her term in 2021.

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