Angela Merkel to Step Down as German Chancellor in 2021
"I will not be
seeking any political post after my term ends," she told a news conference
in Berlin.
She also said she
would not seek re-election as leader of the centre-right CDU party in December.
She has held the post since 2000.
The CDU was severely
weakened in Sunday's poll in the state of Hesse, the latest in a series of
setbacks.
Both the CDU and its
national coalition partners, the Social Democrats, were 10 percentage points
down on the previous poll there.
The
election comes just weeks after Mrs Merkel's Bavarian sister
party, the CSU, suffered huge losses in a state parliament vote.
Parties like the
left-leaning Greens and the far-right, anti-immigration AfD have grown in
national support following the 2017 general election, as backing for the major
centre parties has waned.
Angela Merkel did
her best to maintain her famous poker face but at times she looked rather sad
as she announced what amounted to an official - albeit drawn-out - farewell to
German politics.
She has always
insisted that if she is to lead Germany, she must also lead her party.
The announcement is
intended to silence critics in her party and win back the voters who have
deserted the CDU in favour of parties like AfD and the Greens, but it also
reflects her dwindling grip on power.
Much depends on her
successor as party leader. If it is a loyalist - like Annegret
Kramp-Karrenbauer - Germany might see a smooth transition to a new chancellor,
possibly allowing Mrs Merkel to see out her term.
But the vultures are
circling. Already an old rival, Friedrich Merz, has announced his candidacy. If
one of Mrs Merkel's adversaries prevails as party leader, her chancellorship
becomes uncomfortable and possibly untenable.
Mrs Merkel said she
took "full responsibility" for poor performance.
"As chancellor
and leader of the CDU I'm politically responsible for everything, for successes
and for failures," she said.
"When people
are telling us what they think of how the government was formed and what they
think of our work during the first seven months of this parliament... then it
is a clear signal that things can't carry on as they are.
"The time has
come to open a new chapter."
She also made it
clear she would not handpick her successor as party leader and would
"accept any democratic decision taken by my party".
Annegret
Kramp-Karrenbauer would be the obvious choice for Merkel loyalists to replace
her. She is currently the party secretary.
However, Health
Minister Jens Spahn, a leading critic of the chancellor's open-door migration
policies, has also announced his candidacy.
And Friedrich Merz,
a former leader of the CDU-CSU parliamentary group and an old rival to Mrs
Merkel, has thrown his hat into the ring.
Mrs Merkel's CDU
plunged 11 percentage points to 27% in Sunday's elections in the central state
of Hesse, according to preliminary results. This was the party's worst showing
in the state since 1966.
The SPD, which is in
coalition with the CDU nationally, fell by a similar amount to 19.8%.
The main
beneficiaries were the Greens, who paradoxically share power with the CDU in
the state and have now drawn level with the SPD, and the far-right AfD, who
rose to 13%.
The Hesse vote
follows a pattern of losses for the two main parties, with the AfD doing
particularly well in eastern states.
Also on 14 October,
the CDU's Bavarian ally, the CSU, lost its absolute majority in the state's
parliament which it has dominated since 1957. Like in Hesse, the SPD also lost
badly and the Greens and AfD surged.
While the Greens
appear to have benefited from the SPD's slump in support, it seems clear that
the centre-right has lost voters to the AfD.
Part of the reason
could be anger at Mrs Merkel's decision to open Germany's borders to large
numbers of migrants, a move which the AfD has vehemently opposed.
FROM bbc.com/news/world-europe
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