If German Chancellor Olaf Scholz were a football manager, he’d be sacked by now. Under his watch, Germany has become the worst-performing major economy. His approval ratings are dire, and only a third of his own party say they want him to lead them into the next election. Yet Scholz is determined to seek a second term next year, no matter the costs.
The German Chancellor seemed to be entirely unperturbed by the mood in his party and in the country as he held the last press conference before the summer break on Wednesday. Appearing without a tie and with the top button of his shirt undone, he smiled throughout and was visibly determined to appear relaxed.
When a reporter asked if he’d follow US President Joe Biden’s lead and step aside for the 2025 election, he replied with his trademark sarcasm by thanking them for the “incredibly kind and friendly question”. Once the laughter in the room had subsided, he declared that his Social Democrats were “a very united party. We’re all determined to campaign together in the federal elections and win. As chancellor, I will run for re-election.”
Many of his fellow Social Democrats will find the situation less amusing. In the EU elections in June, the centre-left party got just 14% of the vote, putting them in third place behind the centre-right Christian Democrats and the far-Right Alternative für Deutschland. Polls are predicting similar results for a federal election.
If nothing changes and the SPD gets something around the 15% mark next year, it would be a historic low for the party. Excluding the Nazi era, when the party was banned, you’d have to go back to 1887, when the movement was still in its infancy, to find a worse result.
In the 2021 election, the SPD had won by a whisker, getting 25.7% of the vote and beating the Christian Democrats by 1.6%. The latter had run without Merkel for the first time in 16 years and fielded the deeply unpopular Armin Laschet. Scholz had been Vice Chancellor in Merkel’s coalition government and ran the campaign as the continuity candidate, even imitating Merkel’s trademark hand gesture.
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SubscribeThe veneer of Democracy seems to be slipping all over the western world at the moment.
The so called “ruling class” seem to be trying to hang on to power and influence no matter what.
Any idea of following the will of the people seems to be irrelevant. I think losers consent has completely disappeared across most of the west.
Hang on at any cost and bring in the lawyers to get our way!!
I can’t wrap my ahead around the fact these politicians are oblivious to the reasons why voters are angry.
I doubt they’re oblivious. They don’t care because they believe we’re irrelevant.
Germany needs a FPTP system, like Britain!
It would have helped if the article had given information on possible successors to Schultz in the SPD. Perhaps there aren’t any?