German Chancellor, Angela Merkel, Speaking at a meeting of her Christian Democratic
Union (CDU) in Berlin, said she expected her toughest campaign to date, and
vowed to "fight for our values and our way of life". General
elections are expected in Germany next year. Mrs Merkel's poll ratings have
slipped since the height of her popularity but she retains wide support.
The chancellor, who has been in office since 2005,
is being challenged by the populist right-wing AfD party. She announced she
would stand again after meeting party leaders at CDU headquarters. She told
reporters that the decision to run for a fourth term had been "anything
but trivial after 11 years in office".
She added that she expected challenges from both the
right and the left of the political spectrum. In September, Mrs Merkel accepted
responsibility for election defeats for the CDU in several states and conceded
that her open-door policy towards migrants was a factor. She's kept Germany
guessing for weeks, but it looks as though Angela Merkel has finally answered
the so called K-frage (chancellor question). A poll for one Sunday newspaper
(in German) found that 55% of Germans would vote for her. Mrs Merkel's approval
ratings have gone up and down in recent months as a result of her refugee
policy but they remain the envy of other world leaders.
Even so, she will be battling the tide of populism
that swept Donald Trump to victory in the States and which is also washing
across Europe. The anti-Muslim party Alternative fuer Deutschland (AfD) is
likely to win seats in the national parliament next year. It's highly unlikely
to take Mrs Merkel down but it is leaching votes from Germany's established
political parties.
Those parties are
by and large likely to be
relieved by Mrs Merkel's decision. In the past few years the job of German
chancellor has become one of the most powerful political positions in the
world. The next incumbent must not only lead the country but deal with a
fragmenting EU, in a world which may be much changed by the new US
administration.
It's widely (sometimes grudgingly ) accepted here
that there simply isn't another realistic candidate for the job. As one broadcaster
put it: "Angela Merkel - the indispensable". A pastor's daughter who
grew up in communist East Germany, Mrs Merkel has run the united country since
2005.
If she wins next year's elections, she would equal
the post-war record set by Helmut Kohl, who was chancellor from 1982 to 1998. Germany
- Europe's economic powerhouse - does not have term limits on the country's top
job.
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