The Star Malaysia

Laschet wins battle for polls

Governor set to lead Merkel’s bloc in Germany election

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BERLIN: Armin Laschet, the governor of Germany’s most populous state, won a bruising power struggle to become the candidate of Chancellor Angela Merkel’s centerrigh­t bloc for chancellor in the September election.

Laschet, 60, now faces another big battle: to connect with voters and win over frustrated fellow conservati­ves who backed his more popular rival, Markus Soeder.

Their Union bloc is the last major political force to nominate a candidate for chancellor in the Sept. 26 parliament­ary election, in which Merkel is not seeking a fifth term after nearly 16 years in power.

The race turned into a heated duel after both Laschet, the leader of Merkel’s Christian Democratic Union, and Soeder, who leads its smaller Bavarian sister party, the Christian Social Union, declared their interest in succeeding Merkel.

“The die is cast: Armin Laschet will be the chancellor candidate of the Union,” Soeder said yesterday.

“We will support him with all our strength, without a grudge.”

Parts of the CDU favoured Soeder, while others vehemently opposed his bid to elbow Laschet aside for the top job.

Soeder has much better poll ratings, but Laschet was elected in January as the leader of by far the bigger of the sister parties. It was primarily a conflict of personalit­y and style rather than policy.

Laschet is the governor of the western state of North RhineWestp­halia. Soeder is the governor of Bavaria.

At the beginning of last week, Laschet informally rallied the CDU leadership behind his bid.

But Soeder said the matter shouldn’t be resolved “only in a small back room”.

After days of talks failed to produce a solution but laid bare deep divisions in the CDU, Soeder said on Monday that the bigger party must decide the matter and his CSU would respect a “clear decision”.

After more than six hours of debate going into the night, Laschet garnered the votes of 31 of 46 members of the CDU’s federal executive committee, representi­ng a majority of 77.5%, party sources said.

Soeder won the backing of nine members and six others abstained, according to the participan­ts.

That prompted Soeder to concede.

The Union bloc campaigns together in federal elections and has a joint parliament­ary group in Berlin. The CSU exists only in Bavaria, while the CDU runs in Germany’s other 15 states. — Agencies

 ?? — AFP ?? Power struggle: Soeder and Laschet.
— AFP Power struggle: Soeder and Laschet.

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