Merz
casts himself as a reformer to stem the German far right’s rise
A series
of incremental reforms pushed through by the chancellor is unlikely to deliver
the political inflection point needed to stop the AfD’s advance.
July 10,
2026 4:00 am CET
By James
Angelos
https://www.politico.eu/article/friedrich-merz-casts-himself-as-reformer-stem-the-far-rights-rise/
BERLIN —
German Chancellor Friedrich Merz is sporting a new look.
Dressed
in a sharp suit and dark sunglasses, black leather briefcase in hand, he cuts
the figure of a no-nonsense, hard-charging Reformkanzler — a “chancellor of
reforms” who gets things done. At least that’s how he’s depicted in the curated
image promoted by his conservative Christian Democratic Union (CDU).
The
Reformkanzler campaign is part of Merz’s broader effort to convince voters he
is delivering the sweeping reforms he has long promised to revive Germany’s
economy and counter the growing pessimism many Germans feel about their
country’s future — a malaise that has helped drive the rise of the far-right
Alternative for Germany (AfD) party, which now leads in national polls.
Merz has
spent recent months trying to lock in reform agreements within his coalition
ahead of parliament’s summer recess, beginning Friday — and ahead of
September’s state elections in eastern Germany, where the AfD is close to
capturing at least one state parliament. The goal is to show German voters that
his ideologically-divided coalition of conservatives and center-left Social
Democrats is dynamic enough to make the hard choices needed to turn things
around.
“Time and
again, I hear the accusation that the political center isn’t delivering, that
it only obstructs and blocks its own progress,” Merz said during a speech in
Germany’s Bundestag on Thursday. “Let me respond in no uncertain terms: The
center does deliver,” he added.
“The
answers offered by radical parties — whether from the left or the right — may
sound tempting, but they do not build, they destroy,” Merz went on. “They
divide our country and, should they assume political responsibility in Germany,
would lead it into the abyss.”
By some
measures, the chancellor has been notably successful. Coalition leaders have in
recent weeks struck agreements on a series of overhauls to the pension, tax and
health insurance schemes meant in large part to bring down costs for employees,
reforms business leaders have long demanded to make the country more
economically competitive.
Many of
the changes represent the kind of grinding overhauls previous governments have
avoided because they involve unpopular measures like increasing the retirement
age and cutting some health insurance benefits, and in that sense, they are
arguably the stuff of mundane, responsible governance.
But to
many voters and some business leaders, the measures come across as incremental
and anemic — hardly the kind of soaring promise of change that would stop the
far right, which, unburdened by the realities of governing, is promising to
bring political revolution to Germany.
In fact,
the Merz reform that seems to have received the most attention — and stoked
some of the greatest controversy — involves new rules intended to make it
harder for employees to take sick days, part of his effort to get Germans to
work longer hours.
AfD
politicians, predictably, pounced on the sick leave proposal.
“Mr.
Chancellor, once again it’s clear that you have absolutely no empathy,
especially for the citizens,” Tino Chrupalla, the AfD’s national co-leader,
said in the Bundestag Thursday. “You are full of mistrust and resentment toward
the sick,” he went on before attacking Merz, who formerly worked for global
asset manager BlackRock, as out of touch with regular people.
“Such
inhumane proposals are put forward only by politicians who themselves have
apparently never worked with their hands, but have only managed other people’s
capital from the comfort of their executive chairs.”
The
chancellor’s ‘deceptive packaging’
A simple
reality drives Merz’s Reformkanzler campaign: he’s in deep political trouble.
Only 13
percent of Germans are satisfied with the chancellor’s work, according to the
latest benchmark ARD-DeutschlandTrend poll released last week and conducted
after some of the reform deals, including on pensions. That is the lowest
rating for a sitting chancellor in the survey’s nearly 30-year history.
The
survey also suggests most Germans are opposed to one of the key pillars of
Merz’s pension reform: linking retirement age to life expectancy. Almost
two-thirds (63 percent) said this was the wrong course.
Business
leaders, too, said that while the reforms are a step in the right direction,
they’re not nearly enough.
The
recent measures are “a positive sign of the coalition’s shared commitment to
reform and its ability to get things done, but not a powerful stimulus for
growth,” Tanja Gönner, chief executive of the Federation of German Industries
(BDI) lobby group, said in a statement.
Merz’s
coalition also attempted to sweeten the deal for voters by agreeing to tax cuts
for low and middle-income earners. But even here, promised relief may not be
anywhere near enough to resonate with voters facing rising prices on homes,
energy and food.
A working
family with two children and a total taxable income of 60,000 euros could see
its tax burden reduced by more than 600 euros annually, according to a
coalition summary of the plan — and that is once it’s to be fully implemented
in 2028.
The
opposition Greens argued the tax cut falls far short and that any savings for
families would be wiped out by increases to pension contributions. Katharina
Beck, a Greens lawmaker on the Bundestag’s finance committee, likened the tax
relief in an interview to “deceptive packaging” — like opening a bag of chips
that’s only half full.
Katharina
Dröge, co-leader of the Greens parliamentary group, pointed out that the Merz
government’s reforms have only just been agreed on by coalition leaders, and
still face a lengthy passage through the Bundestag, where they could encounter
fresh hurdles.
In other
words, she said, it was too soon for self-congratulation.
“The fact
that you managed to walk out of a coalition committee meeting intact doesn’t
deserve any applause,” Dröge said in the Bundestag Thursday. “That’s not an
achievement for which you can praise yourself.”
Nette
Nöstlinger contributed to this report.


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