BERLIN (Reuters) – Germany’s two rivals to succeed Angela Merkel as conservative chancellor candidate in a September election went head to head on Tuesday to win the support of lawmakers, exposing deep rifts within the parliamentary bloc.
The race between Armin Laschet, leader of Merkel’s Christian Democrats (CDU), and Markus Soeder, head of the Bavarian CSU sister party, has descended into a messy spat just two days after both vowed to make a quick and amicable decision.
At the meeting of both parliamentary parties, which lasted at least four hours and was held in parliament’s plenary chamber, Soeder homed in on his hefty lead in opinion polls, participants said.
“Do we want to win?” Soeder asked lawmakers, according to participants. “In the end, it’s not the programme that decides but the people,” they quoted him as saying.
While opinion at the meeting was split, a majority backed Soeder, said participants. The view of the parliamentary party is an important factor, but not necessarily decisive in the choice of who runs as the bloc’s chancellor candidate.
There is no formal procedure as in the past, the likeliest candidates have decided behind closed doors.
Laschet, whose strength stems mainly from his position as head of the larger party, won the support of the CDU top brass on Monday. After the meeting, he said he and Soeder would make a joint recommendation.
A centrist who became CDU leader only in January, Laschet stressed the importance of unity and was quoted by Spiegel Online as saying “We don’t need a one-man show”. Premier of the state of North Rhine-Westphalia, his chaotic handling of the coronavirus pandemic has hit his popularity.
Soeder, a canny political operator, said on Sunday he was ready to stand for the chancellorship if he had CDU backing.
Many conservative lawmakers worry that a long contest will damage the bloc which looks lost fighting a campaign without its main electoral asset, Merkel, who is not standing for a fifth term. She said she is keeping out of the race.
The CDU’s Friedrich Merz accused Soeder of deliberately undermining the CDU. “Does the CSU realise what it means to dismantle the next party leader of the CDU within a few weeks?” Merz wrote to his local party members in a newsletter.
(Reporting by Andreas Rinke; Writing by Madeline Chambers; Editing by Alexandra Hudson)