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Conservatives race to find successor to Angela Merkel

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Coralie FEBVRE -


he search for German Chancellor Angela Merkel’s eventual successor begins in earnest this week, as her centre-right CDU party opens the race to elect a new leader after her heir apparent stepped down.


Annegret Kramp-Karrenbauer, who was Merkel’s preferred successor, was toppled after just 14 months as CDU leader following a row over apparent cooperation with the far-right AfD party in a regional parliament.


The 57-year-old will hold talks this week with the three favourites to succeed her: long-time Merkel rival Friedrich Merz, Health Minister Jens Spahn and Armin Laschet, the premier of Germany’s largest federal state North-Rhine Westphalia. After Kramp-Karrenbauer failed to unite the party behind her, fears abound that the bid to find a worthy successor to Merkel could split the CDU, as the top candidates have differences in political direction.


“The problem with political giants is that they have to end like giants... an orderly transition of power is not possible,” wrote popular daily Bild on Sunday, comparing Merkel to former CDU chancellor Helmut Kohl. After nearly two decades in which Merkel has positioned the CDU firmly in the centre, the race is set to be defined by differing visions of the party’s future.


Merz and Spahn, both of whom ran against Kramp-Karrenbauer in the last leadership race, advocate a return to the party’s conservative roots, while Laschet is more of a centrist like Merkel.


Merz, a 64-year-old former lawyer and board member at the German arm of investment firm BlackRock, called Merkel’s government “unsustainable” and “abysmal” last November.


Ambitious 38-year-old Spahn, meanwhile, has combined social liberalism on issues such as gay marriage with a harder line on immigration.


Speaking to Bild on Sunday, the leader of the CDU’s parliamentary youth wing Mark Hauptmann said a “team solution” between Merz and Spahn would be “ideal”.


Though widely seen as the continuity candidate, 58-year-old Laschet criticised Merkel’s European policy in a speech Sunday, calling for a “quicker and more decisive response” to French President Emmanuel Macron’s EU reform proposals.


“The CDU needs all three, regardless of which roles they take,” former CDU general secretary Ruprecht Polenz told Bavarian radio on Saturday. The contest comes as the CDU struggles to fend off electoral pressure from the AfD to the right and the Green Party, which is soaring in the polls, to the left. It has tumbled from 40 per cent of the vote under Merkel in 2013 to poll at just 26 per cent, according to an Infratest survey published last Thursday. — AFP


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