Merkel's party puts off choice of new leader for 2nd time

German Chancellor Angela Merkel's
party on Monday delayed for the second time a decision on who will become its
new leader, putting off a convention planned for December in a
coronavirus-prompted move that irked one of the top contenders.
Whoever wins the Christian Democratic
Union's leadership will be in pole position to become the center-right
candidate to succeed Merkel as chancellor in a German election expected next
fall, though that isn't guaranteed.
Current leader Annegret
Kramp-Karrenbauer, Merkel's immediate successor as party chairwoman, took over
in late 2018. She struggled to impose her authority before announcing in
February that she wouldn’t run for chancellor in the 2021 election and would
relinquish the party leadership.
A special April convention for about
1,000 delegates to choose the new CDU leader fell victim to the the first phase
of the COVID-19 crisis. The party put off the decision until a regular
convention in Stuttgart on Dec. 4.
With new virus infections rebounding
in Germany as they are across Europe, and gatherings again being restricted in
many places, officials concluded that the Stuttgart convention couldn't go
ahead either.
The party's general secretary, Paul
Ziemiak, said the leadership still hopes to hold a convention with delegates
present. It hopes to decide Dec. 14 on when the choice will be made; and if not
then, at a meeting scheduled for Jan. 15-16.
Deciding the issue with an online vote
isn't currently legally possible, though the party is pushing for that to
change. If nothing else is possible, the party could hold an online convention
followed by a mail-in vote, Ziemiak said.
There are three main contenders for the
CDU leadership: Friedrich Merz, 64, a conservative former leader of its
parliamentary group who spent years away from front-line politics; Armin
Laschet, 59, the more liberal governor of North Rhine-Westphalia state; and
Norbert Roettgen, 55, who chairs parliament’s foreign affairs committee.
The CDU’s poll ratings have been
bolstered by the Merkel government’s management so far of the pandemic, and it
has a strong lead. But Merkel, 66, has vowed not to seek a fifth term as
chancellor.
Surveys suggest that Merz, who
narrowly lost to Kramp-Karrenbauer in 2018, is a favorite with the party's
grassroots, but he holds no government or other formal political post to
bolster his profile.
Merz had pushed for a vote in
December. He criticized the delay before it was even officially announced,
tweeting that it was “a decision against the CDU rank and file."
Earlier Wednesday, Merz — a one-time
rival of Merkel, who ousted him as the party's parliamentary leader in 2002 —
told ARD television “there are parts of the party establishment ... that want
to prevent me from becoming party chairman.”
Ziemiak said that “there is no reason
to assume that.”
“We stand together as a party, and
that goes for everyone,” he said.
A decision on who runs for chancellor
will have to be taken jointly with the Christian Social Union, the CDU's
Bavaria-only sister party. The CSU leader, Bavarian governor Markus Soeder, 53,
is also widely considered a potential candidate.