'It's been an honour,' says Merkel as
German CDU picks new leader
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[December 07, 2018]
By Paul Carrel and Madeline Chambers
HAMBURG (Reuters) - Angela Merkel bowed out
as leader of her Christian Democrats on Friday with an emotional speech
to her conservative party as it met to pick her successor who will move
into pole position to become Germany's next chancellor.
The frontrunners are Annegret Kramp-Karrenbauer, a Merkel protege seen
as the continuity candidate, and Friedrich Merz, a Merkel rival who has
questioned the constitutional guarantee of asylum to all "politically
persecuted" and believes Europe's biggest economy should contribute more
to the European Union.
Merkel said in October she would step down as party chief but remain
chancellor, an effort to manage her exit after a series of setbacks
since her divisive decision in 2015 to keep German borders open to
refugees fleeing war in the Middle East.
Merkel, 64, told the CDU congress in Hamburg of her gratitude for the
chance to have served as party chief for 18 years, 13 as chancellor in
which she came to dominate European politics as its key crisis manager
and consensus-builder.
"It has been a great pleasure for me, it has been an honour," she said
to a standing ovation lasting nearly 10 minutes, and fighting to hold
back tears.
Outlining the multiple challenges facing Germany, from rapidly changing
technology to climate change and a global shift away from
multilateralism to defending national interests, she said: "In times
like these, we will defend our liberal views, our way of life, both at
home and abroad.
"The CDU in 2018 must not look back but look forward, with new people
... but with the same values," added Merkel, who has said she would
remain neutral on her successor as party chief.
The new CDU leader will be chosen by 1,001 delegates who vote at the
congress later on Friday. The winner will likely lead the CDU in the
next federal election due by October 2021.
A survey by pollster Infratest dimap for broadcaster ARD on Thursday
showed 47 percent of CDU members favoured Kramp-Karrenbauer compared
with 37 percent for Merz and 12 percent for Health Minister Jens Spahn.
Merz, 63, who lost out to Merkel in a power struggle in 2002 and is
returning to politics after a decade in business, is backed by CDU
members tired of Merkel's consensual politics. He won support this week
from party veteran and former finance minister Wolfgang Schaeuble.
DOWN TO THE WIRE
Kramp-Karrenbauer's trump card is her record as former state premier in
Saarland, where she led a broad coalition with the Greens and
pro-business Free Democrats - alliance-building skills useful in
Germany's fractured political landscape.
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German Chancellor Angela Merkel attends Christian Democratic Union (CDU)
party congress in Hamburg, Germany, December 7, 2018. The sign
reads: "Thank you Angela Merkel". REUTERS/Fabian Bimmer
Kramp-Karrenbauer, 56, has differentiated herself from Merkel on
social and foreign policy by voting in favour of quotas for women on
corporate boards and by taking a tougher line on Russia.
She told Reuters last week that Europe and the United States should
consider blockading Russian ships over the Ukraine crisis. But on
what lies ahead for the CDU, Kramp-Karrenbauer said: "I have no
particular recipe."
By contrast, Merz takes clear positions that appeal to rank-and-file
party members hungry for a more clearly defined conservative party.
He wants tax cuts, a bigger German contribution to holding together
the EU, and a more robust approach to challenging the far right.
Merz will benefit from the fact that 296 of the delegates at the
congress - almost a third - will be from his home state, the western
state of North Rhine-Westphalia.
A senior CDU official, speaking on condition of anonymity, said many
delegates were undecided before the congress and could be swayed by
how the candidates present themselves on Friday. "It could come down
to the speeches on the day."
(Editing by Mark Heinrich)
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