logo
Who Is Friedrich Merz, Who Needed Two Votes to Become Germany's Chancellor?

Who Is Friedrich Merz, Who Needed Two Votes to Become Germany's Chancellor?

New York Times27-05-2025

Before he returned to politics, won a national election and became the first would-be chancellor in modern German history to fail to win the job on the first ballot in Parliament, Friedrich Merz accepted an invitation to a gathering of the French Foreign Legion in Corsica.
At the last moment, the organizers asked him to arrive on the parade ground not by road or rail, but by parachute. Mr. Merz, then a corporate lawyer, had never jumped out of a plane. But a fellow attendee recalled recently that Mr. Merz did not hesitate. He made the jump — successfully, but with a bit of a rough landing.
It is not yet clear what the long-term implications are of Mr. Merz's more recent rough landing — his bid to become Germany's next chancellor.
After requiring two rounds of voting in Parliament, he will become Germany's next leader. But he will do so at a pivotal time for the nation's economy, security and role in Europe, and with fresh questions swirling around him.
The inability to secure enough votes Tuesday to become chancellor on the first vote comes as he needs to wrangle lawmakers to confront crises at home and abroad, while holding off a surge from the far-right Alternative for Germany, or AfD.
Mr. Merz is a product of the Sauerland in Germany's wealthy west, a region that defines his politics and persona. During his campaign, he ran on the slogan 'More Sauerland for Germany,' evoking the region's image as a heartland of the country.
Supporters call him an agile politician with the potential to deliver on the big issues worrying the German public: growth, defense, immigration.
'I think he's extremely well prepared and very deep and thoughtful,' said John P. Schmitz, a deputy White House counsel under George H.W. Bush. Mr. Schmitz helped hire Mr. Merz to work in the German offices of the Chicago law firm Mayer Brown and jumped out of the plane in Corsica with Mr. Merz around 2005.
But others say Mr. Merz struggles to plan more than one step ahead, leading him to break promises — and leaving him vulnerable to surprise setbacks like the vote Tuesday.
His about-faces on spending and migration have alienated many of his base's conservative voters. And Mr. Merz and his party have sagged in the polls since the election, allowing the AfD to draw even with them in some surveys. Even before his parliamentary stumble on Tuesday, he had one of the lowest approval ratings of any German leader in the modern era.
'There's this old saying: 'Whatever you do, act wisely and consider the end,'' said Ruprecht Polenz, a former secretary general of Mr. Merz's party. 'This thinking,' he added, 'I feel is not his main strength.'
Read more about Mr. Merz, his background and his approach to politics in our profile of him.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Starmer focused on grooming victims not ‘grandstanding', says Reeves
Starmer focused on grooming victims not ‘grandstanding', says Reeves

Yahoo

time2 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Starmer focused on grooming victims not ‘grandstanding', says Reeves

Sir Keir Starmer has been focused on the 'victims' of grooming gangs and not 'grandstanding', Rachel Reeves has suggested, after the Prime Minister committed to a national inquiry. The Chancellor said that Sir Keir has been looking at 'actually doing the practical things to ensure that something like this never happens again'. After initially resisting pressure to implement a full probe, the Prime Minister said he had read 'every single word' of an independent report into child sexual exploitation by Baroness Louise Casey and would accept her recommendation for the investigation. Home Secretary Yvette Cooper is set to address Parliament on Monday about the findings of the review. Reform UK leader Nigel Farage described the move as a 'welcome U-turn', while Kemi Badenoch called on him to apologise for 'six wasted months'. Asked whether the Prime Minister had changed his mind about the idea of a national inquiry, the Chancellor told the Sunday With Laura Kuenssberg programme: 'I think Keir Starmer, our Prime Minister, has always been really focused, as he was when he was director of public prosecutions, on the victims and not grandstanding. 'But actually doing the practical things to ensure that something like this never happens again, but also to ensure that the victims of this horrific abuse over many, many years is got to grips with and that people have answers to their questions.' Earlier this year, the Government dismissed calls for a public inquiry, saying its focus was on putting in place the outstanding recommendations already made in a seven-year national inquiry by Professor Alexis Jay. Shadow chancellor Sir Mel Stride criticised the Government's 'very late' decision to launch the inquiry, and claimed it had only come after pressure from the Tories. Sir Mel told BBC One's Sunday With Laura Kuenssberg: 'It's a very late decision – it should have happened far, far earlier. 'We've been calling for this for many, many months.' He accused Sir Keir of previously dismissing concerns from senior Tory figures. 'Kemi Badenoch, Chris Philp and others have been derided by the Prime Minister for hopping on some kind of far-right bandwagon, dog-whistle politics and the rest of it,' Sir Mel said. 'That was the wrong response. This is just another example of the Prime Minister being pressurised by us into U-turning.' The inquiry will be able to compel witnesses to give evidence, and it is understood that it will be national in scope, co-ordinating a series of targeted local investigations. Speaking to reporters travelling with him on his visit to Canada on Saturday, the Prime Minister said: 'I have never said we should not look again at any issue. 'I have wanted to be assured that on the question of any inquiry. 'That's why I asked Louise Casey who I hugely respect to do an audit. 'Her position when she started the audit was that there was not a real need for a national inquiry over and above what was going on. 'She has looked at the material she has looked at and she has come to the view that there should be a national inquiry on the basis of what she has seen. 'I have read every single word of her report and I am going to accept her recommendation. 'That is the right thing to do on the basis of what she has put in her audit.'

Israel-Iran live updates: Israel strikes Iran missile sites, as 8 killed in overnight Iranian attack, Israel says

time7 hours ago

Israel-Iran live updates: Israel strikes Iran missile sites, as 8 killed in overnight Iranian attack, Israel says

The Israeli Police said Sunday there had been "multiple confirmed fatalities." 10:26 Iran launched dozens of ballistic missiles toward Israel on Friday night in retaliation for Israel's surprise attack early Friday. Israel struck at the heart of the Iran's nuclear program, killing several nuclear scientists as well as high-ranking military leaders, according to Israeli officials. The U.S. did not provide any military assistance or have any involvement in the Israeli strike, a U.S. official told ABC News. Key Headlines 15 minutes ago IAF downs 7 drones, Israel says 30 minutes ago 8 killed, hundreds injured in overnight Iranian strikes, Israel says 53 minutes ago Israeli air force strikes Iranian missile launch infrastructure, IDF says Jun 14, 2025, 7:50 PM EDT Missiles launched from Iran toward Israel, IDF says Jun 14, 2025, 4:15 PM EDT Iran launches missiles toward Israel, IDF says Jun 14, 2025, 2:53 PM EDT Israeli Air Force completing 'wave of strikes' in Iran, IDF says Here's how the news is developing. 52 Updates Jun 13, 2025, 11:40 AM EDT Iranian minister calls attack 'brazen,' 'unlawful' Iranian Foreign Minister Seyed Abbas Araghchi called Israel's attack a "brazen and unlawful act of aggression" in an urgent letter to the United Nations Security Council Friday requesting an emergency meeting. He called Israel "the most terrorist regime in the world," saying it "has crossed every red line," and asking the international community to not allow this attack to go unpunished. He said Iran will "respond decisively and proportionally" to the attacks. The attack is a 'deliberate escalation that flagrantly violates the Charter of the United Nations and the most fundamental norms of international law," Araghchi said in a letter submitted by the Iranian Permanent Mission to the U.N. "This is not just merely a military attack against one nation—it is a direct assault on the principles that underpin the international legal order," Araghchi wrote. Araghchi asked the Security Council to "strongly condemn this act of aggression, and take urgent and concrete measures" to hold Israel accountable. Jun 13, 2025, 11:29 AM EDT IDF deploys reservists across Israel The Israel Defense Forces has started "to deploy reservists from different units to all combat arenas," throughout Israel, the IDF said in a statement Friday. Netanyahu to speak with Trump, Putin: PM's office Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is planning to speak with President Donald Trump, as well as Russian President Vladimir Putin and U.K. Prime Minister Keir Starmer, later today, according to the Israeli Prime Minister's Office. The office also said Netanyahu has already spoken to German Chancellor Friedrich Merz, Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi and French President Emmanuel Macron. "The leaders expressed understanding for Israel's defense needs against the threat of Iranian annihilation, and the Prime Minister said he will continue to be in constant contact with them in the coming days," according to a statement from the prime minister's office. There was no time given for when Netanyahu would be speaking to Trump about the strikes. Jun 13, 2025, 9:26 AM EDT US provided 'exquisite' intel to Israel The U.S. did not play a military role in Israel's attack on Iran as Secretary of State Marco Rubio confirmed, but it provided "exquisite" intel and will help defend Israel if needed -- especially against ballistic missiles that are expected to be launched from Iran, according to a U.S source familiar with the intel on the strike. The U.S. did have advance notice of the strikes and they will continue and be very intense over the next few days, the source said.

As Trump heads to the G7, Canada hopes to avoid another Charlevoix-style eruption
As Trump heads to the G7, Canada hopes to avoid another Charlevoix-style eruption

Hamilton Spectator

time18 hours ago

  • Hamilton Spectator

As Trump heads to the G7, Canada hopes to avoid another Charlevoix-style eruption

OTTAWA - U.S. President Donald Trump is set to arrive Sunday in Alberta for the G7 summit — his first visit to Canada since leaving in a huff seven years ago. Ottawa could use everything from golfing and creative scheduling to special cabinet orders to make the visit successful and avoid a repeat diplomatic disaster. 'He is somebody who is very prickly when he feels like he's not being fully respected,' said Eric Miller, president of Rideau Potomac Strategy Group, a cross-border consultancy. 'You want to make absolutely sure that … he walks away and says, 'You know, those Canadians aren't so bad after all.'' Better than last time The last time Trump was in Canada — for the G7 summit in the Charlevoix region of Quebec — things ended in a blowout. Trump refused to sign the communiqué, the published list of statements on common G7 issues that are mostly negotiated and agreed to by member nations ahead of time. He left early and lambasted Trudeau as 'very dishonest and weak' in a spat over tariffs. The summit included what Miller called the 'photograph for the ages' — of then German chancellor Angela Merkel and others standing sternly over a seated Donald Trump, who appeared to be glaring back with crossed arms. German Ambassador to Canada Matthias Lüttenberg put it bluntly when he told a June 4 panel that Ottawa was again navigating 'very difficult circumstances' as G7 chair — and capably, in his view. 'I mean, I wouldn't like to negotiate with a country at the table who's questioning my sovereignty as a state,' he said. Sen. Peter Boehm, who was summit head in 2018, recalled two late nights of negotiations because the Trump administration didn't align with the others on including climate change or references to the 'rules-based international order.' Informal talks Prime Minister Mark Carney won office in April after repeatedly saying he could stand up to Trump's threats to ruin the Canadian economy in order to make the country an American state. Carney had a cordial visit to Washington in early May and even got praise from Trump on social media and in person, despite the president insisting Canada should still become a U.S. state. The two have continued talking. U.S. Ambassador Pete Hoekstra revealed earlier this month that the president and Carney have exchanged frequent calls and texts on trade and tariffs. Miller said facetime between the two leaders in Alberta could help them make progress on economic concerns, as well as Trump's pitch to bring Canada into his proposed Golden Dome missile shield project. 'Given that there is this conversation underway, it is important that they have an opportunity to continue that, and to meet perhaps in a setting that is less structured and formal than the Oval Office,' Miller said. 'Life is about imperfect choices, and it's absolutely the right thing to have Mr. Trump come to Canada.' He said he's not sure if there will be any formal announcement, though he added Trump is keen to sign agreements with multiple countries ahead of his self-imposed July 9 deadline for so-called retaliatory tariffs. Miller said both Canada and the U.S. are likely to take credit for Ottawa announcing this month it will drastically speed up its pledge to meet NATO's defence spending target. Trump might also take note of the fact that he's in one of the few provinces that have opted to resume sales of U.S. alcohol, after all provinces banned it from their liquor store shelves in response to U.S. tariffs. Lower expectations Ottawa's decision to schedule relatively short group discussions among G7 leaders, and to invite numerous other world leaders, could mean more of the one-on-one meetings that Trump prefers. 'Trump does not like multilateral meetings particularly. He loses interest,' Boehm said. Canadian officials have said they are focused on releasing shorter, focused statements — which could avoid the kind of major blowups that could come from trying to craft the kind of massive joint communiqué that has concluded almost all other G7 summits. Former prime minister Jean Chretien told a panel Thursday that if Trump does have an outburst, G7 leaders should ignore him and 'keep talking normally.' Miller said that for Canada, 'ensuring a positive agenda that doesn't lead to acrimony afterwards' means advancing its interests without isolating the U.S., particularly with so many guest leaders attending. 'The trick that Mr. Carney has to pull off is to reassure the U.S. that it wants a good, positive relationship — while at the same time running vigorously, as quickly as possible, to try to build new relationships,' he said. It's also entirely possible that Trump will leave before the meetings conclude. A visiting felon Keeping it positive is also likely why Ottawa will skirt rules that might bar Trump from crossing into Canada after he was found guilty on 34 criminal counts in a 'hush money' trial in May 2024. Immigration lawyers say those convicted of serious crimes abroad must serve their time and wait five years before seeking a certificate of admissibility to Canada, though there are loopholes if someone seeks a visa for a compelling reason. The federal cabinet passed a formal order published in February that gives diplomatic immunity and privileges to 'representatives of a foreign state that participate in the G7 meetings.' Fore! Another way Canada could ensure a successful visit could be to get Trump to the Kananaskis Country Golf Course — a prospect much discussed in media reports that remained unconfirmed as of Friday afternoon. Carney gave Trump a hat and golf gear from that course during his visit to the Oval Office in May. Miller said that wasn't just a gimmick — Trump loves making deals while teeing off, and it could provide Carney or others with hours of facetime on a golf cart, which is Trump's comfort zone. 'Golf has been pretty central to his life,' he said. 'It makes eminent sense to have Mr. Trump playing at a high-quality golf course.' This report by The Canadian Press was first published June 14, 2025.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store