Hawke's Bay Today

Gentle persuasion in an age of populism

At a time when so many strong men are seeking dictatoria­l powers around the world, the most successful democratic politician of the past few decades was a woman who believed in consensus, writes Matt Qvortrup

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‘Now she is all alone.” Former president Barack Obama slightly squinted and bit his lip in characteri­stic fashion as he spoke these words to his adviser. Obama had spent three hours alone with Angela Merkel in Hotel Adelon in Berlin. It was late November 2016. Donald Trump had just been elected the 45th president of the United States and his soon-to-be predecesso­r was worried as he prepared to leave office. Only one individual, thought Obama, could keep the liberal world order alive while America was taking leave of its geopolitic­al senses. And that person was the German chancellor.

But Merkel had decided not to seek another term after the German federal elections in September 2017. Obama was in the German capital to make her change her mind. He succeeded. Merkel was persuaded that it was her duty to carry on the baton of liberal internatio­nalism, free trade and democracy. At least for the next four years.

“I noticed a tear in her eye as we left,” Obama’s speechwrit­er Ben Rhodes later noted when he recounted the rendezvous between the two leaders. At least, that is the story as told in a fly-on-the-wall account by the editor of the German newspaper Die Welt. In the next four years, it was Merkel who sought to salvage the Paris climate accord, and it was she who maintained the geopolitic­al pressure on Vladimir Putin when Trump did the opposite.

If anything is Merkel’s legacy, it is her custodians­hip of the liberal world order. Angela Dorthea Merkel (ne Kastler) is above all a pragmatic foreign politician. Whereas her immediate predecesso­rs — her mentor, the Christian democrat Helmut Kohl (1982-98) and the social democrat Gerhard Schrder (1998-2005) are primarily remembered for domestic policies, Merkel was a foreign-policy politician. Kohl presided over German unificatio­n and Schrder reformed the welfare state. Merkel’s legacy, now that she really is standing down, has been internatio­nal.

Evidence, deliberati­on, experts

Merkel used state interventi­on on a massive scale to rescue the world economy after the 2008 financial crash. She embraced anti-austerity policies to save the euro. She was always pragmatic. As she told me in 2008: “I want as much market economics as possible, with as much state interventi­on as necessary”. When reminded that this was reminiscen­t of socialist politics from the 1960s, she smiled and shrugged, “Yes, and, so what, if it works”.

That things just must work — or funktioner­en (in German) — is her mantra in most things. If any politician was wedded to the idea of evidence-based policymaki­ng, it is her. As a scientist with a doctorate in quantum physics, she is unique in a country where most politician­s are lawyers or economists.

When she had to choose a Cabinet minister for the Kanzleramt — her executive office — she opted for Helge Braun, a medical doctor. This was because she knew he would focus on facts. It turned out to be an inspired choice. Braun had a special interest in infectious diseases, and his work, alongside a well-functionin­g public health system, meant Germany was ahead of many other countries when Covid-19 hit the world in early 2020.

Because of her preference for facts and evidence, Merkel has been called the “master of procrastin­ation” — Die Zauderknst­lerin. Whereas most world leaders are “men of action” who go off like proverbial firecracke­rs when crises emerge, Merkel preferred to do her homework, and then, at the last minute, make a decision based on facts. The Germans even invented a word for it, Merkeln — “to merkel” — means to mull over a decision before action is taken.

We didn’t need another hero

People often search for exceptiona­l

individual­s. It is a popular view that history is shaped by exceptiona­l men and women. Certainly there is a place for this “great man theory of history”, as it was called in the gendered language of the Victorian age. If we are tempted by this trope, we should note that but for Merkel, the fate of the world economy, the euro, and the

over one million refugees that were allowed into Germany during the migrant crisis would have been very different. Yet she was not a successful politician because she was uniquely wise or prescient. She got results because she was willing to collaborat­e and find common ground.

At a time when so many strong

men are seeking dictatoria­l powers around the world, it provides food for thought that the most successful democratic politician of the past few decades — and perhaps even the modern era — is a woman who believed in consensus. Merkel shows that politics should be focused on solving problems rather than on

winning the arguments.

“Who do you ring when you want to call Europe?” asked Henry Kissinger, the former US secretary of state. The answer for the past 16 years has been Angela Merkel. There are no politician­s who can fill her shoes. But her successor — whoever he or she turns out to be — will still be the

person to call. Germany, due to its size, speaks for Europe. That Obama wanted Merkel to stay on during what he foresaw would be a chaotic period under Trump was not only due to her formidable skills — it was also a sign that Germany is the European power.

The brute fact is that internatio­nal politics is determined by institutio­ns

and establishe­d rules more than it is governed by individual­s. Merkel’s legacy is not so much what she did, but how she defended this rule-based internatio­nal order.

The Conversati­on

Matt Qvortrup is chairman of ● Applied Political Science at Coventry University

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