Trump has
already screwed over Germany’s new chancellor
As the
far-right AfD rises, Friedrich Merz presides over a coalition of crumbling
mainstream parties.
May 6, 2025
4:00 am CET
By James
Angelos and Nette Nöstlinger
https://www.politico.eu/article/donald-trump-germany-chancellor-afd-friedrich-merz/
BERLIN ―
Friedrich Merz will be sworn in as German chancellor on Tuesday with a vow to
provide Europe clear direction in troubled times ― but he’s already in a
perilous position.
Merz begins
his chancellorship as a weakened figure. Even in the period between winning the
election in February and becoming leader, his approval ratings have dropped
sharply. His coalition government holds one of the slimmest parliamentary
majorities since World War II, with just 52 percent of seats.
Now,
Germany’s most important and powerful ally for many decades — the United States
— has started undermining Merz at every turn. The administration of U.S.
President Donald Trump appears intent on weakening him further by bolstering
his chief political opponents, the far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD)
party.
After
Germany’s federal domestic intelligence agency classified the AfD last week as
a “proven” extremist organization — a designation that is fueling a
long-simmering domestic debate on whether to ban the AfD under German law
provisions intended to prevent a repeat of the Nazi past — the party received
backing from the highest ranking members of Trump’s cabinet.
The
extremist label was “tyranny in disguise,” U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio
said in a post on X. “What is truly extremist is not the popular AfD, but
rather the establishment’s deadly open border immigration policies that the AfD
opposes.” U.S. Vice President JD Vance echoed the sentiment, saying “the German
establishment” was effectively rebuilding the Berlin Wall.
Merz ― of
the center right Christian Democrats (CDU) ― is part of the German
establishment that Rubio and Vance were disparaging. Despite vowing to lead a
severe crackdown on migration, Merz has refused to govern in coalition with the
anti-immigration AfD, which came in second place in the February election, the
best result for the far right in Germany’s postwar history, deeming the party
to be too extreme. Instead he opted for the center-left Social Democratic Party
(SPD), which scored its worst result in a national election since the 19th
century.
This puts
Merz in a uniquely risky political position. As the far right rises, he finds
himself presiding over a coalition of crumbling mainstream parties that once
dominated Germany’s political landscape.
Centrist
governments comprising the SPD and Merz’s conservative bloc have long been
referred to as “grand coalitions” for their sweeping majorities. But there’s
nothing imposing about the current “grand coalition,” which is the weakest such
partnership in history and leaves Merz open to accusations he’s leading a
remnant of a vanishing order.
The rise of
the AfD
In this
position, Merz is particularly vulnerable to attacks from the AfD, which will
be the largest opposition party in the parliament. AfD leaders incessantly
depict Merz as a closet leftist because of his refusal to govern with them and
due to his embrace of debt-fueled spending after his election victory, a
complete reversal from his campaign rhetoric.
Already the
AfD appears to be benefiting from that dynamic. The party has risen in the
polls as Merz’s conservative CDU has fallen, topping one survey released in
late April for the first time.
The Trump
administration’s persistent support for the AfD could further destigmatize the
party in Germany and reinforce the AfD narrative that it has been unfairly
targeted for political persecution by the political establishment.
“Since the
AfD is the strongest party in polls now, they want to suppress the opposition
& freedom of speech,” AfD co-leader Alice Weidel wrote on X in response to
Rubio.
Merz on
Monday said he found it “inconceivable” that AfD leaders will become chairs of
parliamentary committees, particularly in light of the domestic intelligence
agency’s classification of the party as extremist. In doing so he ended a
debate that his own parliamentary group leader had initiated last month with a
proposal that would have radically softened the conservatives’ approach to the
extreme right.
Trade, NATO
and Ukraine
The American
support for the AfD may well supersede all other difficulties in the
transatlantic alliance, said Dominik Tolksdorf, an expert on the transatlantic
relationship at the German Council on Foreign Relations, a research institute.
“This is a
huge problem for Merz and at least as serious as many of the other debates
we’re currently having on trade, NATO and Ukraine,” he said. “If the Trump
administration wants to, it could use this accusation [that the AfD is being
suppressed] to put pressure on the German government. How the next government
will deal with this whole new dimension in the coming months is a big
question.”
Merz has
pledged to take on a greater leadership role within Europe, and will seek to
follow through on that immediately after being sworn in. On Wednesday he plans
to travel to Warsaw and Paris in an effort to revive the so-called Weimar
Triangle of Poland, Germany and France — an informal alliance he views as key
to driving a more assertive European defense policy. Not long after, he is
expected to travel to Kyiv.
Many
Europeans “are waiting for us to once again make a powerful contribution to the
success of the European project,” Merz said in Berlin on Monday. “We are living
in times of profound change, of deep upheaval … And that is why we know that it
is downright our historic duty to lead this coalition to success.”
As Merz
pursues that effort, one thing has become clear: The Trump administration will
be working against him.
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