Merz
lashes out at Trump and Brussels as Germany’s economy falters
The
German chancellor is casting around for someone to blame abroad as growth
stalls and his popularity nosedives at home.
April 29,
2026 4:00 am CET
By James
Angelos
https://www.politico.eu/article/germany-friedrich-merz-donald-trump-eu-economy/
BERLIN —
Germany’s economy is flatlining, and Chancellor Friedrich Merz is blaming
everyone but himself.
The
chancellor was elected on a promise to jolt Germany’s enervated economy back to
life, but one year on, he and his conservative-led government have failed to do
so. As Merz’s dismay grows and his popularity plummets, he is increasingly
lashing out at factors beyond his immediate control — from the war in Iran to
what his government casts as heavy-handed regulation and waste in Brussels.
The
chancellor this week chose an unlikely place to vent his frustration: on the
stage of a high school auditorium in his home region in rural western Germany.
A subdued
Merz told students the U.S. had been “humiliated” by Iran’s regime, lacks a
strategy for ending the war, and has left peace talks empty-handed — causing
significant economic damage to Germany given the resulting surge in energy
prices.
“It’s
costing us a lot of money — a lot of taxpayer money — and it’s costing us a lot
of economic strength,” Merz said. “This war against Iran has a direct impact on
our economic performance, and for that reason it must be brought to an end as
soon as possible.”
It was
Merz’s fiercest attack on Donald Trump’s handling of the Iran war yet, and it
prompted rhetorical retaliation from U.S. President, who, in a Truth Social
post Tuesday, claimed the chancellor is “OK” with the regime in Tehran having a
nuclear weapon. “He doesn’t know what he’s talking about!” Trump wrote. “No
wonder Germany is doing so poorly, both Economically, and otherwise!”
For Merz,
who has sought to keep friendly relations with Trump, the rebuke likely
reflects a clear political calculus. Trump and the war are deeply unpopular in
Germany, making them expedient targets for the chancellor.
The same
logic underpins Merz’s attacks on Brussels: Railing against red tape — from AI
rules to public spending — plays particularly well among business leaders at
home while shifting blame outward.
At a
trade fair in Hannover earlier this month, the chancellor said he would push to
“exempt industrial AI from the current regulatory straitjacket” imposed by the EU. Merz’s conservatives have also launched an
effort to get European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen to slash
regulations more aggressively, while the chancellor has also pushed back
strongly against her budget plans, calling instead for “across-the-board cuts in all sections” of the EU executive’s proposal.
Merz’s
attacks on Brussels are part of a bid to placate German industry leaders, who
blame excessive EU regulation for a loss of competitiveness. Four in five
German firms complain that bureaucracy has increased over the past three years,
according to a survey of 1,000 companies by the German Economic Institute. More
than 90 percent want EU rules scaled back.
“Only as
a strong economic hub can we be a strong international player,” Stefan Berger,
a German conservative MEP focused on the economy, told POLITICO. “In this
situation, it makes sense to look to Brussels, scrutinize some existing
regulations and cut through unnecessary red tape so that European companies can
focus more on production and less on paperwork.”
Merz’s
attempts to pin the blame abroad have a great deal to do with his limited
domestic options and sinking popularity. The chancellor this week, for the
first time, fell to last place in polling firm INSA’s popularity ranking of
Germany’s 20 most prominent politicians. Meanwhile, only 15 percent of Germans
said they are satisfied with Merz’s centrist coalition, according to Germany’s
benchmark ARD-DeutschlandTrend poll released early this month, a new low.
As
dissatisfaction with Merz’s government grows, the far-right Alternative for
Germany (AfD) party — which has been hitting the government hard on the economy
and high energy prices — has surged to new heights in polls, and is now the
most popular force in German politics, according to POLITICO’s Poll of Polls.
‘The
cause lies with us’
The
trouble for Merz is that he has no easy domestic political options for
immediately stimulating Germany’s export-oriented economy in the face of strong
global headwinds that have hampered growth, from the conflicts in Iran and
Ukraine to Trump’s trade wars. Last week the German economy ministry slashed
its growth forecasts for 2026 and 2027, citing the fallout of the war in the
Middle East.
A
historic move by Merz and his allies to unleash hundreds of billions of euros
in borrowing for infrastructure and defense last year — widely referred to as
an economic “bazooka” at the time — failed to produce the economic blast many
in his centrist coalition had hoped for.
That’s
partly because Germany’s government has redirected the bulk of funds originally
earmarked for infrastructure into covering budget gaps, according to reports
last month from two leading research institutes. At the same time, defense
spending doesn’t stimulate economic growth to the same degree as other forms of
investment.
Germany’s
coalition also can’t borrow its way out of the economic rut, and in fact has
been slashing costs. On Wednesday, Finance Minister Lars Klingbeil is set to
present his draft 2027 budget framework for which he had to find cuts across
ministries to close a budgetary gap of around €34 billion.
That
leaves Merz facing the large structural reforms he and his center-left
coalition partners in the Social Democratic Party (SPD) have vowed to
undertake, but have repeatedly delayed. Those include far-reaching changes to
control spiraling health care costs, and overhauls of the tax and pension
systems to ease the financial burden on employees and businesses.
Merz’s
cabinet is expected to agree on the first of these packages, the health care
reform, on Wednesday, but his ideologically conflicted coalition remains at
odds over key aspects of the tax and pension overhauls. That’s particularly the
case after the SPD suffered heavy losses in two recent state elections, which
ramped up pressure on party leaders to retrench and refocus on their base.
“I will
block any attempts to roll back workers’ rights,” Bärbel Bas, one of the SPD’s
national leaders, said this week.
The
spending plans and the reform packages still require parliamentary approval,
with lawmakers facing thorny negotiations over the coming months. The stakes
are high: Germany’s previous left-leaning government led by former Chancellor
Olaf Scholz collapsed in 2024 over spending disagreements and budget
constraints.
While
German business leaders broadly support Merz’s effort to scale back EU
regulation — and see eye-to-eye with the chancellor on the need for a
U.S.-Israeli peace deal with Iran to bring down energy costs — many still blame
domestic politicians for repeatedly failing to understake structural reforms.
“We are
no longer competitive as a business location,” Peter Leibinger, president of
the Federation of German Industries business association, said earlier this
month at the Hannover trade fair. Geopolitical developments like the Iran war
didn’t cause the country’s economic malaise, they merely exacerbated it,
Leibinger added.
“The
cause lies with us,” he said.
Nette
Nöstlinger contributed reporting.

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