Advertisement

Angela Merkel’s Party Chief to Hold Critical Succession Talks

(Bloomberg) -- The battle over who might succeed Angela Merkel intensified when another of the German chancellor’s prominent antagonists threw his hat into the ring just as the outgoing head of her Christian Democratic Union was due to begin talks with the three front-runners.

Norbert Roettgen, a former environment minister who is head of the Bundestag’s foreign policy committee, unexpectedly announced his candidacy Tuesday to replace Annegret Kramp-Karrenbauer as CDU leader. If he succeeds, he will have the right to decide whether to run as the party’s chancellor candidate at the next election, due in September 2021 after the end of Merkel’s fourth term.

Kramp-Karrenbauer blew open the contest to replace Merkel last week by saying that she will step down. She’s due to meet Friedrich Merz -- one of the three leading contenders -- later on Tuesday as she tries to engineer a smooth transition and avert damaging internal bickering.

However, Kramp-Karrenbauer -- widely known by her initials AKK -- appears to be increasingly losing control of the process. Roettgen said it should be accelerated, with a special party congress before the summer break, and called for a ballot of CDU members, which AKK opposes.

Merz is a former CDU caucus leader and long-term Merkel rival. Health Minister Jens Spahn, also from the right wing of the party, and Armin Laschet, the more moderate state premier of North Rhine-Westphalia, are also firmly in the race and AKK is due to meet Spahn and Laschet later this week before making a recommendation to CDU leaders on Feb. 24 on how to proceed.

Roettgen belongs to the CDU’s liberal wing and was once a close Merkel confidant. But she fired him after he led the CDU to its worst ever electoral result in North Rhine-Westphalia in May 2012 and failed to recapture Germany’s most populous state from the Social Democrats.

It’s the only example of Merkel actively firing a member of her cabinet.

More recently, the 54-year-old has taken a strong pro-European stance. He’s been critical of U.S. policy under President Donald Trump and taken a hawkish position on China, advocating that the German government rule out Huawei from its 5G networks. In today’s Bild newspaper, he calls for sanctions to be imposed on Russia for bombing civilians in the Syrian city of Idlib.

At a news conference Tuesday, Roettgen laid out six proposals outlining why he is running, including the need to maintain the CDU as a party of the center ground, with a clear distinction from the far right and the extreme left.

Merz has an early edge in the race, which is potentially bad news for Merkel as her aim to serve out her term through 2021 could fail if he wins and moves to force her out. Spahn has also gone on the attack, with Merkel seen as weakened by the collapse of her plan for AKK to succeed her.

Roettgen said that Merkel should serve out her term as she is the elected chancellor of the coalition with the Social Democrats.

Seven out of 10 CDU supporters see Merz as a good chancellor candidate, and across the political spectrum he’s ahead of his rivals with 40% approval, compared with Laschet’s 30% and Spahn’s 24%, according to an Infratest dimap poll for public broadcaster ARD.

The CDU wants the three main candidates to reach an agreement on who will run, according to a party official. That would avoid the kind of infighting that’s seen as one reason for the collapse in support for the Social Democrats.

In the latest national Insa poll for Bild published Tuesday, Merkel’s CDU/CSU bloc was on 26.5%, followed by the Greens on 20.5%, the far-right Alternative for Germany on 15% and the SPD on 14.5%.

(Recasts throughout with Roettgen comments)

--With assistance from Alan Crawford.

To contact the reporters on this story: Arne Delfs in Berlin at adelfs@bloomberg.net;Iain Rogers in Berlin at irogers11@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Chad Thomas at cthomas16@bloomberg.net, Andrew Blackman, Daniel Schaefer

For more articles like this, please visit us at bloomberg.com

Subscribe now to stay ahead with the most trusted business news source.

©2020 Bloomberg L.P.