German parliament expected to meet May 6 to elect Friedrich Merz as the new chancellor
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This article was published 14/04/2025 (202 days ago), so information in it may no longer be current.
BERLIN (AP) — The German parliament plans to meet on May 6 to elect Friedrich Merz as the country’s next leader, if all the parties in his proposed government approve a coalition agreement reached last week.
Parliament’s lower house, the Bundestag, said Monday that Speaker Julia Klöckner is preparing to call the session early next month.
Merz will need a majority of all members of the house to be elected as post-World War II Germany’s 10th chancellor, succeeding Olaf Scholz. The proposed coalition of his center-right Christian Democratic Union; its Bavarian sister party, the Christian Social Union; and Scholz’s center-left Social Democrats has a relatively modest majority, with 328 of the 630 seats.
Since no party wants to work with the far-right, anti-immigration Alternative for Germany, which finished second in Germany’s election in February, no other plausible combination of governing parties has a parliamentary majority.
There are still two hurdles to clear before parliament can vote. The biggest is a ballot of the Social Democrats’ membership on the coalition agreement, which starts on Tuesday and ends on April 29. The CDU also must approve the accord at a party convention set for April 28, while the CSU’s leadership already approved it last week.
The would-be coalition aims to spur economic growth, ramp up defense spending, take a tougher approach to migration and catch up on long-neglected modernization.
But there is some resistance in the Social Democrats’ ranks after the party finished third in February with its worst postwar result in a national parliamentary election. The party’s youth wing has come out against the deal.
Party co-leader Lars Klingbeil said Sunday he is confident that a majority of members will say it’s right for the Social Democrats to “take responsibility for Germany.”
“There are always alternatives. … One alternative is new elections, one alternative is perhaps a minority government,” Klingbeil told ARD television. But in today’s troubled times, “Germany must be a place of stability,” he added. “For that, we need a stable democratic government, and we have presented a sensible coalition agreement for that.”