German parliament elects Merz as chancellor in second round of voting

By AFP
|
May 07, 2025
Incoming German Chancellor Friedrich Merz receives his certificate of appointment from German President Frank-Walter Steinmeier during a ceremony at Bellevue Palace in Berlin, Germany May 6, 2025. —Reuters

BERLIN: Germany´s conservative leader Friedrich Merz won on Tuesday a nail-biter second vote in parliament to become chancellor after he lost the first round in a stunning early setback.

Merz, 69, scored an absolute majority of 325 against 289 in the secret vote in the lower house of parliament.

He takes over at the helm of a coalition between his CDU/CSU alliance and the centre-left Social Democrats (SPD) of the outgoing chancellor, Olaf Scholz.

President Frank-Walter Steinmeier was set to appoint him as post-war Germany´s 10th chancellor later on Tuesday, along with his cabinet, before Merz is due to visit Paris and then Warsaw on Wednesday.

His victory caps a long ambition to lead Europe´s biggest economy, which was first foiled decades ago by party rival Angela Merkel who went on to serve as chancellor for 16 years.

Merz´s eventual victory on Tuesday was bittersweet as the initial defeat -- the first such outcome in Germany´s post-war history -- pointed to rumblings of discontent within his uneasy coalition.

The unprecedented first-round loss was “a bad start” for Merz and “shows that he cannot fully rely on his two coalition parties, wrote analyst Holger Schmieding of Berenberg Bank.

“That will sow some doubts about his ability to fully pursue his agenda, damaging his domestic and international authority at least initially.” The far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD) especially cheered the heavy political blow to Merz, who has vowed to restore stability in Berlin after half a year of political turmoil.