Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

German fight for nomination to succeed chancellor brewing

- ARNE DELFS

Bavarian leader Markus Soeder joined the race to succeed Chancellor Angela Merkel after Germany’s election in September, setting up a fight with the head of her Christian Democratic Union for the nomination in her governing conservati­ve bloc.

Soeder and Christian Democratic Union party chairman Armin Laschet both declared their bid for the chancellor­ship at a news conference in Berlin on Sunday, leading toward a potential decision as early as this week. Leadership committees of the Christian Democratic Union and Soeder’s Christian Social Union party are meeting separately today to set the stage for the next steps in the nomination.

Merkel, 66, won’t run for another term, and her departure after 16 years in office has opened the field for who will lead Europe’s biggest economy. She hasn’t taken sides in the race.

The Bavarian premier played up surveys suggesting he’s more popular than his rival, saying it’s important that the conservati­ve candidate have broad backing among party members and the general public.

Soeder’s chances could hinge on whether the two parties agree to have their leadership members hash out the candidacy or decide to open it up to their joint parliament­ary caucus in Berlin, where many lawmakers support Soeder. Laschet signaled on ARD he’ll be asking the Christian Democratic Union’s national leadership to back his candidacy today.

“Our goal at this time, with a chancellor who is leaving office, is to foster as much unity between the CDU and CSU as possible,” Laschet told reporters. “There’s a lot at stake. Europe is watching how Germany develops.”

The Christian Democratic Union and Christian Social Union traditiona­lly field a joint candidate for chancellor. Soeder’s entry signals a gloves-off contest between two sister parties whose alliance has helped ensure Germany’s political stability since the end of World War II.

While Merkel and Soeder clashed during Germany’s 2015 refugee crisis, the leader of Bavaria’s regional Christian Social Union party has backed her push for restrictio­ns during the covid-19 pandemic. Laschet, meanwhile, was criticized by Merkel for a lax response in his home state of North Rhine-Westphalia.

On Sunday, both candidates signaled support for quick approval of Merkel’s planned changes of Germany’s infectious-diseases law, which would shift some powers to the federal government from the states. Other state leaders have demanded changes to the draft law circulated on Saturday.

National polls put support for the two parties at between 26% and 28%, compared with almost 33% of the vote in the last election in 2017. The Social Democrats, Merkel’s coalition partner at the national level, have also declined. The Green party, which took 8.9% last time, is polling as high as 23%, increasing chances that it’ll be part of the next government.

While approval polls favor Soeder over Laschet, only two candidates from socially conservati­ve Bavaria have run for chancellor since 1980, and both lost.

Soeder said he’s ready to run if the Christian Democratic Union, the bigger of the two parties, backs him, but that he would hold no grudges if they decided otherwise.

Laschet, the state premier of North Rhine-Westphalia, described Soeder as a potential candidate and said the matter would be solved with mutual respect.

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Laschet
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Soeder

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