Merz is
weakened from Day 1. Europe will pay the price.
The EU’s
center looks flaky, with France a mess and Germany’s Friedrich Merz having to
battle to be confirmed as chancellor.
May 7, 2025
4:01 am CET
By Tim Ross
https://www.politico.eu/article/friedrich-merz-europe-germany-leadership-donald-trump/
As Europe’s
frontline war leader, Volodymyr Zelenskyy spoke for millions of Europeans when
he congratulated Friedrich Merz on scraping into office — on his second attempt
— as the new chancellor of Germany.
“We
sincerely hope that Germany will grow even stronger,” the Ukraine president
said, “and that we’ll see more German leadership in European and transatlantic
affairs.”
Keep hoping.
Zelenskyy’s
message was diplomatic, but it contained an unmistakable critique of the gaping
hole at the heart of European politics: Germany’s weak leadership and
procrastination in the face of aggression from Russia and betrayal by Donald
Trump’s United States.
Tuesday, May
6 was meant to be the day that changed all that, giving Germany a strong new
government and restoring Europe’s mojo. Instead, Bundestag members humiliated
Merz with an unprecedented insult, refusing to confirm him in office even after
his coalition deal was done.
It was the
last thing the European Union’s centrists needed.
Merz
eventually won enough votes to become chancellor in a second ballot, but “the
political damage is done,” Katja Hoyer, an academic and author of “Beyond the
Wall,” told POLITICO. “This is not the start of a confident, stable government,
but a sign of how deep the fissures of the German center ground run.”
AWOL in
Berlin
For the past
three years, Germany has been reluctant to perform its traditional European
leadership role, if not shirking it altogether.
Merz’s
predecessor Olaf Scholz talked a big game on defense but dragged his feet on
supplying Kyiv with weaponry such as tanks and long-range missiles that
Zelenskyy said he needed to repel Vladimir Putin’s invading army.
Leading a
fractious three-party coalition, Scholz had little room to make major moves and
eventually could not keep his government from crumbling.
Zelenskyy
noted that strong leadership from Merz would be “especially important with the
future of Europe at stake — and it will depend on our unity.”
Yet German
politics is now deeply divided. Without “unity” at home, Merz will struggle to
drive the change he says Europe needs, from a surge in defense spending to
policies that can insulate German manufacturing from Trump’s tariffs and the
challenges posed by China.
In
February’s election, the far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD) placed a
strong second with 21 percent of the vote behind Merz’s Christian Democrats and
ahead of the Social Democrats. It will remain a menace to the new government as
migration continues to dominate political debate. The German economy is
moribund, too, with traditional industry on the slide.
These
structural challenges facing Merz’s coalition characterize a political center
ground that is losing its grip across Europe. The same could be said of
Britain, for example. Or, more critically for the EU, France.
Macron’s
missteps
Germany’s
leadership is vital for the EU because the bloc’s second-biggest economy can’t
escape its own political entanglements.
Last year,
French President Emmanuel Macron took a gamble on a snap election in an effort
to crush the far-right National Rally (RN), but instead delivered a hung
parliament that is unable to agree on virtually anything. Recent polls suggest
the RN’s Jordan Bardella would have a good shot at winning the French
presidency in 2027.
“The whole
of Europe looked to Berlin today in the hope that Germany would reassert itself
as an anchor of stability and a pro-European powerhouse. That hope has been
dashed. With consequences way beyond our borders,” said Jana Puglierin, head of
the Berlin office of the European Council on Foreign Relations.
Merkel’s
reject
At the heart
of all this is a question. How did Merz end up making such a mess of what
should have been a parliamentary formality? Was it a mistake by one or two
lawmakers who thought they could get away with a protest? Or was it a deeper
sign of an unpopular leader prone to political miscalculation?
During his
brief time in the international spotlight so far, Merz has shown himself to be
impulsive and fallible. He took a gamble in relying on AfD votes to pass
migration measures in the Bundestag before the election, believing it would
strengthen his CDU party’s vote. Instead, the Christian Democrats slid, while
the AfD continued its march.
In
astonishingly blunt statements after the polls closed on election night, Merz
laid into Trump and questioned the viability of NATO.
Merz’s
critics point to a decision by former leader Angela Merkel to bar him from
powerful positions as evidence she knew he wasn’t good enough to hold high
office.
If they’re
right, it might be that the only thing worse for Europe than a weakened
Chancellor Merz would be a strong one.


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