The
incredible shrinking German chancellor
Friedrich
Merz wanted to lead Europe. First he has to lead his country.
By MARC
FELIX SERRAO
in Berlin
Illustration
by Natália Delgado/ POLITICO
https://www.politico.eu/article/the-incredible-shrinking-german-chancellor-friedrich-merz/
May 6,
2026 4:00 am CET
By Marc
Felix Serrao
Marc
Felix Serrao is a global reporter with The Axel Springer Global Reporters
Network.
When
Friedrich Merz arrived at the White House last summer for his first meeting
with U.S. President Donald Trump, the German chancellor brought a gift
calibrated to flatter without groveling: a framed copy of the birth certificate
of the American leader’s grandfather, Friedrich Trump, born in 1869 in
Kallstadt, a wine-growing village in southwestern Germany.
The
meeting went smoothly enough. The two men talked Ukraine, trade, defense
spending and the fraying transatlantic order. Trump, pleased, called Merz a
“very respected man.” That was then.
Trump now
speaks about Merz very differently. Last week, the president said the
chancellor “doesn’t know what he’s talking about,” and added: “No wonder
Germany is doing so poorly, both economically, and otherwise!”
Merz, 70,
had walked into this fight himself. Speaking to students at a high school, the
chancellor had accused the U.S. of attacking Iran without a strategy or exit
plan. “An entire nation is being humiliated by the Iranian leadership,” he
said.
Since
then, the bilateral mood has cooled sharply. Washington has announced plans to
withdraw thousands of U.S. troops from Germany. And the planned stationing of
Tomahawk cruise missiles on German soil, once presented as part of a new way to
deter Russia, now looks far less certain.
Berlin is
trying to play down the damage, insisting the troop reduction had long been
under review and that no final decision has been made on the missiles. But
whatever the precise chain of cause and effect, the damage is real — and it
happened under a leader who has taken pride in being seen as what the Germans
call an Außenkanzler, a chancellor whose authority rests heavily on command of
foreign affairs.
The
timing is unfortunate. On Wednesday, Merz marks his first year in office. Until
recently, foreign policy was the one field in which even many of his critics
thought he had found his footing. Abroad, he seemed more assured than his
predecessor Olaf Scholz and more willing than former Chancellor Angela Merkel
to speak the language of power: more serious on defense, clearer on Russia,
more comfortable with the idea that Germany may no longer be able to avoid a
role it has long resisted — leading.
At home,
Merz has always looked far weaker. He is constrained by his coalition with the
center-left Social Democrats (SPD) and weighed down by the impression that he
gives ground too quickly when the partnership comes under strain. For most of
his first year as chancellor, one thing seemed to define him: the gap between
external ambition and domestic weakness. The clash with Trump now threatens to
eliminate that distinction, just not in the way Merz might have hoped.
In a poll
published in late April, just 15 percent of Germans said they were satisfied
with his performance, while 83 percent were dissatisfied — the worst rating
ever recorded for a German chancellor. Even Scholz, at the tail end of his
government, was more popular than Merz is now.
For this
report, I spoke with current and former advisers to the chancellor, former
federal ministers who served under Merkel and Scholz, senior members of Merz’s
Christian Democratic Union, as well as the center-right party’s supporters in
its youth organization and its pro-business wing. Most spoke only on condition
of anonymity, a measure of how sensitive judgments about Merz’s first year in
office have already become.
Two
questions stand at the center: How did a man who took office promising
authority and renewal come to seem so diminished so quickly? And can he
recover?
The loner
in power
Merz won
Germany’s 2025 election because he promised a fresh start. He cast himself as
Merkel’s opposite: willing to end the long, soft drift of the previous decades
and deliver a genuine conservative, pro-market change of course.
His
biography suited that promise. When I first interviewed Merz in May 2020, as
the coronavirus pandemic shifted almost every conversation on to a screen, his
political career looked long over. Eighteen years earlier, Merkel had ousted
and sidelined him as leader of their party’s parliamentary group. What followed
was a lucrative second act in business: years on supervisory boards and
advisory councils, far from the daily trench warfare of politics.
Merz was
a man with money but without power: vice president of the CDU Economic Council,
a party-aligned business lobby, yet politically peripheral, with no government
office, party post or parliamentary seat. A private citizen, in other words,
who could have glided very comfortably into retirement. But Merz had unfinished
business.
Before we
could begin our on-screen interview, he fought with the technology in his
Berlin apartment. I could hear him, but he could hear nothing. Merz grew
irritated, then furious. After a few seconds, he began to shout. What exactly
he shouted never became part of the authorized interview and cannot be quoted
here. Suffice it to say: The man can curse.
His
closest aide at the time, a young man named Armin Peter, fixed the problem;
Merz had not turned on his speakers. It was a small scene, but in retrospect,
it feels oddly revealing. Today, as chancellor, he commands a vast apparatus.
Back then, he had only Peter and a few loyal helpers from the hilly Sauerland
region, the rural, conservative corner of Western Germany that shaped him
politically.
There are
politicians who reward and return loyalty. Merkel is one of them; she has kept
the same office manager and close adviser for more than three decades. Merz is
different. He expects loyalty, one former confidant told me, but does not
return it.
None of
the people who accompanied Merz on his long march to power has remained in his
immediate orbit. A key former personal aide and confidante left the chancellery
after just 11 weeks. His former chief of staff was pushed out in January.
Peter, the young man who helped him with the speakers, was demoted from
personal spokesperson to deputy party spokesperson. He now works for a business
forum.
The
result, according to someone who was once close to Merz, is a government
apparatus full of advisers but no real allies. He has no inner circle bound to
him beyond the office, no loyalists fighting together for the policy changes he
promised. Merz, this person said, has immense self-confidence but is also
strikingly susceptible to influence.
Domestic
hobbles
At home,
the picture has been grim from the start.
Merz took
office last year after an election that saw his center-right Christian
Democrats win, but with one of the worst results in the party’s history — and
the far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD) not far behind in second place.
After negotiating a coalition agreement with the Social Democrats, Merz at
first fell short of being chosen chancellor, becoming the first leader in
Germany’s postwar history to have to go back to parliament for a second vote.
He’s had
to scale back his ambitions accordingly. Immediately after the election,
however, he and his coalition partners pressured the outgoing Bundestag to
amend the constitution to allow record borrowing for spending on defense,
infrastructure and the fight against climate change. The hope was to lay the
groundwork for a turning point in the country’s trajectory. Instead, the
perception is that — aside from promises on military spending — Germany’s
course has remained largely unchanged.
A
promised cut in household energy taxes never materialized, nor did Merz’s
loudly announced “autumn of reforms.” Although he once called tax increases
“poison,” high earners are now bracing for more of them. On migration, the
government can point to lower asylum numbers, but deportations remain limited.
And the larger economic ailments persist: high energy prices, heavy taxes and
levies, a runaway bureaucracy and deindustrialization, which is no longer
something on the horizon but a growing reality.
In fact,
rather than being seen as a break from the past, Merz has begun to remind many
Germans of Merkel. But a former CDU federal minister, who also spoke to me on
condition of anonymity, argued that the comparison is unfair in one crucial
respect: Merkel would never have allowed herself to be boxed in by a coalition
partner.
As an
example, he pointed to a recent relief package: a temporary cut in fuel taxes
and a tax-free bonus of up to €1,000 for employees. Merz had expressed doubts
about that kind of response to rising energy prices right until the coalition’s
final negotiating session. Then he signed off on it. Merkel, the former
minister said, would never have entered talks from such a position. And she
would never have let her partners make her look weak.
Christian
Lindner, Germany’s former finance minister, put it more acidly. “Friedrich Merz
won his chancellorship with positions and promises that stand in contradiction
to the positions and actions that now define his chancellorship,” he told me.
“It remains an open question how this break, unprecedented in its scope, will
affect our country’s political culture.”
Lindner,
47, was the leader of the Free Democrats, but his parliamentary career ended
when the FDP crashed out of the Bundestag in the last election. He has since
left politics and joined the executive board of Autoland, Germany’s largest
independent car dealership.
And yet,
Lindner is not alone in seeing a widening gap between Merz’s promises and his
record. Andreas Rödder, one of Germany’s best-known conservative intellectuals,
makes much the same point. For a time, the historian seemed set to become one
of the chancellor’s principal idea men. After Merz took over the CDU, he put
Rödder in charge of a commission on the party’s “values and foundations.”
But when
Rödder began to cast cautious doubt on the CDU’s rigid firewall against
cooperation with the AfD, he came under attack from inside the party — and Merz
declined to stand by him. The chancellor’s central problem, Rödder told me, is
the gap between announcement and implementation.
International
ambitions
In the
earlier months of his chancellorship, foreign policy offered a rare bright spot
for a leader so often besieged at home. Even Merz-skeptics thought he got the
tone right. He sounded more forceful than Scholz or Merkel, especially on
Russia’s imperial aggression and on Europe’s duty to defend both Ukraine and
itself.
Merz
wants Germany to remain anchored in the transatlantic alliance, but he also
wants Europe to become less dependent on American power, calling for “a strong,
self-sustaining European pillar within the alliance.” At the same time, he has
never warmed to Trump’s MAGA movement. His instinct was to deal pragmatically,
and with as much diplomatic restraint as possible.
The
chancellor’s recent Iran remark broke that rule. It was not candor in the
national interest, nor an unavoidable act of principle, but a gratuitous swipe
at a president whose vanity and vindictiveness are well known. The episode may
be the most consequential example of needless rhetorical sharpness. But it was
not the first time Merz had let that side of himself show when dealing with
other leaders.
In March,
the chancellor stepped up to a podium in the European Council building in
Brussels. It was late at night after a long meeting of the EU’s national
leaders, and the 6-foot-6-inch-tall chancellor stooped as he leaned forward to
speak into the microphone. “Well, ladies and gentlemen, good evening or good
morning, whichever you prefer,” he said. “I’m glad you held out. We had to do
the same.” Then the geniality disappeared.
Merz
turned on Viktor Orbán, the nationalist Hungarian prime minister who had
blocked an aid package for Ukraine. Orbán’s veto, Merz said, was “an act of
gross disloyalty in the European Union” that would leave “deep scars.” The
chancellor was not alone in his anger toward the Hungarian leader, but the
directness of his assault stood out. The timing made his attack even sharper.
Orbán, a Trump ally, was headed into a difficult campaign for an election he
would ultimately lose.
Are
Merz’s outbursts simply a matter of clumsy communication and an occasionally
loose tongue? In Germany, he has a reputation for both. Or is the strain of his
troubled coalition at home beginning to spill over into his conduct abroad? A
chancellor weakened domestically may be tempted to sound stronger
internationally. The danger is that, in doing so, he harms the German interests
he means to defend.
Coalition
troubles
One
reason for Merz’s troubles is coalition arithmetic. The chancellor has tied
himself to the political center, emphatically, almost morally, rejecting any
suggestion of cooperation with the far right. “I have made a final decision to
seek support for our policies exclusively in the center,” he said at a CDU
party conference in Stuttgart in February. “At the moment, that narrows us down
to a coalition with the SPD.” The line was meant as a declaration of democratic
hygiene. It also amounted to ceding power to Lars Klingbeil, the vice
chancellor, finance minister and co-leader of the Social Democrats.
Klingbeil
clearly understands how to handle Merz. Twenty-two years younger than the
chancellor, he has often looked like the sharper tactician. Again and again,
Klingbeil has played the role of the pragmatist who would like to go further
but simply cannot sell certain policies to his comrades in the party.
Senior
politicians from Merz’s CDU have often only learned later what had already been
agreed between the two men. When Katherina Reiche, Germany’s economy minister,
recently criticized Klingbeil’s flirtation with a tax on oil-company “windfall
profits,” she was reprimanded by the chancellery. Only after CDU resistance
stiffened did Merz join in the defense of his minister.
The
Social Democrats are not the chancellor’s only problem either. In addition to
lacking a loyal inner circle, Merz and his party lack a network of like-minded
publishers and intellectuals to arm politicians with arguments, something his
opponents on the left and the nationalist right enjoy. This is partly because
Christian Democrats have seen themselves not as an ideological force but as a
broad catch-all movement. The result is a recurring pattern: The chancellor
tries to speak plainly, but without enough argumentative precision, he often
leaves himself open to attack.
In the
fall, for example, Merz spoke of a “problem” in the “cityscape” and connected
that impression to deportations. The formulation was so vague it left ample
room for hostile interpretation. Critics accused him of stigmatizing migrants,
and even parts of his own coalition and party distanced themselves. Merz later
tried to clarify what he had meant. But the damage was done.
That same
pattern runs through his domestic record. Leading economists warned early that
Merz’s debt-financed launch would prove a mere flash in the pan unless it was
followed by serious reform. That warning now looks prescient.
Merz now
enters his second year with three conceivable paths before him: On the first,
the coalition holds and the reforms, like the coalition agreement itself, bear
an unmistakable SPD imprint. Germany gains stability, at least until the next
federal election, but not the change of course the chancellor promised.
On the
second path, strong showings by the AfD in Eastern Germany’s fall elections —
where the far right could even clinch its first state premiership — deepen the
coalition’s centrifugal forces. Merz has repeatedly ruled out a minority
government and shifting majorities, including with the far right. But politics
is full of impossibilities, up until the moment they happen. If Merz remains
unwilling, another figure in his party may prove less inhibited, pushing the
CDU toward tolerating shifting majorities, even with the AfD. And who knows, at
some point, perhaps even toward a coalition, though such a step would very
likely tear the party apart.
On the
third path, an external shock — another war, terrorism, a pandemic, a financial
crash — blows apart the assumptions on which this coalition rests and forces a
sharper reckoning.
It is
still too early for a final verdict on Merz. On that point, everyone I spoke to
agreed, including those who had little positive to say about his first year.
History can move slowly. Germany’s postwar leaders Helmut Kohl and Gerhard
Schröder both needed time before their defining domestic projects emerged. But
they led mass parties with vote shares near 40 or even 50 percent. Under Merz,
the Christian Democrats have been able to muster only about half that.
Meanwhile, the AfD, which Merz once pledged to weaken, has surpassed his party
in the polls.
Merz’s
problem is no longer merely that his domestic record falls short of his
campaign promises. It is that the one area in which he seemed to rise above
that weakness — foreign policy — now reflects a similar flaw: a tendency to
speak forcefully before calculating the consequences.
If the
German chancellor is to recover, he’ll likely have to flip his playbook. He’ll
need to establish authority at home and show more restraint abroad.
The Axel
Springer Global Reporters Network harnesses the resources of the company’s
newsrooms to publish ambitious scoops, investigations, interviews, opinion
pieces and analysis. It allows journalists — including those from POLITICO,
Business Insider, WELT, BILD, Onet and Fakt — to collaborate on major stories
for an international audience of hundreds of millions across platforms: online,
print, TV and audio.
.jpeg)

Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário