The Citizen (KZN)

Tussle for German leadership

NECK-AND-NECK BATTLE FOR VETERAN CHANCELLOR ANGELA MERKEL’S REPLACEMEN­T

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Country that was byword for stability placed in a new period of uncertaint­y.

Berlin – Germans voted yesterday in one of the most unpredicta­ble elections in its recent history, with Angela Merkel’s conservati­ves and the centre-left Social Democrats in a tight race for her crown as she prepares to leave the political stage.

The epochal election ushers in the end of 16 years in power for Merkel and places Germany, a byword for stability, in a new period of uncertaint­y.

Opinion polls show the race for the chanceller­y headed for a photo finish, with Merkel’s CDU-CSU conservati­ve alliance on around 23%, just behind the centre-left Social Democrats on 25% – well within the margin of error.

“We will certainly see some surprises,” said Nico Siegel, head of the Infratest Dimap polling company.

Despite the SPD’s lead in the polls, a victory for the conservati­ves “can’t be ruled out”, he said.

“The race for first place is wide open.”

Around 40% of Germany’s 60.4 million eligible voters have said they are undecided, while the same proportion have already cast their ballots by post – including Merkel herself.

President Frank-Walter Steinmeier was among the early voters, declaring that “to vote is to live democracy” as he cast his ballot in Berlin.

At a polling station in Aachen in western Germany, voter Ursula Becker, 62, said: “This year it’s quite exciting who it will be, and it’s always important who governs.”

battle for the chanceller­y has boiled down to a contest between two men: Finance Minister and Vice Chancellor Olaf Scholz, 63, of the SPD, and Armin Laschet, 60, of the CDU-CSU.

But with both parties likely to fall well short of the majority needed to govern alone, there could be weeks or even months of fraught coalition negotiatio­ns.

After Germany’s last election in September 2017, it was February before the CDU-CSU formed a coalition with the SPD.

Laschet, an affable but gaffeprone centrist and longtime Merkel ally, was for some time the clear favourite to take the reins after the veteran chancellor leaves the stage.

But his popularity began to wane after a series of blunders over the summer, including being caught on camera laughing in the background during a tribute to the victims of devastatin­g floods in Germany.

In the meantime, Scholz, who at the start of the year had looked down and out in the race, saw his ratings begin to rise as he avoided making such embarrassi­ng mistakes.

Often described as capable but boring, Scholz has positioned himself as a safe pair of hands and the true Merkel continuity candidate, despite hailing from a different party.

Along with social justice, climate change has been one of the top concerns among voters in the run-up to the election.

In Aachen, first-time voter Maite Hoppenz, 18, said that cliThe mate change was “definitely a big topic for me because I think it will certainly have a big impact on my future”.

The Green party enjoyed a surge in support earlier this year after naming 40-year-old Annalena Baerbock as its chancellor candidate, at one point even briefly taking the lead as the most popular party.

But after a series of missteps by Baerbock, including a plagiarism scandal, the Greens are now polling well behind the two leading parties on around 17%.

While the chanceller­y may be out of reach for the party, it will likely have a role in Germany’s next government.

All bets are off on the compositio­n of the next coalition, as the SPD and the conservati­ves could each try to cobble together a ruling majority if there is little to divide their score.

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