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Who is Friedrich Merz, the man elected as Germany’s next chancellor?

Mr Merz needed a majority of 316 out of 630 votes in parliament.

By contributor Kirsten Grieshaber, Associated Press
Published
Germany New Chancellor
Friedrich Merz (Ebrahim Noroozi/AP)

Conservative leader Friedrich Merz has been elected as Germany’s chancellor — hours after he failed to win the first round in parliament in a historic defeat.

Mr Merz, 69, who succeeds Olaf Scholz, has vowed to prioritise European unity and the continent’s security as it grapples with the new Trump administration and Russia’s war on Ukraine.

Mr Merz’s two-party Union bloc emerged as the strongest force from Germany’s election on February 23.

He then turned to the Social Democrats, Mr Scholz’s centre-left party, to put together a coalition with a parliamentary majority.

He has already pushed through plans to enable higher defence spending, and faced more pressure to finish the deal after US president Donald Trump’s announcement of sweeping tariffs created significant market disruption.

Germany New Chancellor
Friedrich Merz is congratulated by outgoing chancellor Olaf Scholz (Ebrahim Noroozi/AP)

On Tuesday, Mr Merz needed a majority of 316 out of 630 votes in parliament but only got 310 in the first round. Because it was a secret ballot, it was not immediately clear — and might never be known — who defected from Mr Merz’s camp.

In the second round he received 325 votes.

As chancellor, Mr Merz will face the challenge of helping to fill a leadership vacuum and craft a united response to recent US policy shifts that have strained the trans-Atlantic alliance.

The top job has been late in coming for Mr Merz, a trained lawyer who saw his ascent derailed by former chancellor Angela Merkel in the early 2000s and who even turned his back on active politics for several years.

Despite his political experience, he will take over the chancellery without previously having served in government.

Ms Merkel has described Mr Merz as a brilliant speaker and complimented his desire for leadership, though she acknowledged this was a problem in their relationship.

“We are almost the same age. … We grew up completely differently, which was more of an opportunity than an obstacle,” she wrote in her memoir Freedom.

“But there was one problem, right from the start: We both wanted to be the boss,” she said.

Germany New Chancellor
Former German chancellor Angela Merkel (Markus Schreiber/AP)

Ms Merkel moved to consolidate her grip on Germany’s centre-right after the Union narrowly lost a national election in 2002.

She pushed Mr Merz aside as leader of its parliamentary group, taking the job herself in addition to the leadership of the Christian Democratic Union party she already held. She went on to lead Germany from 2005 to 2021.

Mr Merz turned his back on active politics for several years after leaving parliament in 2009.

He practised law and headed the supervisory board of investment manager BlackRock’s German branch. During that break, he often travelled for business to the United States and China, though he never lived outside Germany.

Volker Resing, who wrote the recent biography Friedrich Merz: His Path To Power, says that Mr Merz would possibly be “the most international chancellor” Germany has had since 1945.

Mr Merz launched his political comeback after Ms Merkel stepped down as CDU leader in 2018 and announced that she would not seek a fifth term as chancellor.

However, he was narrowly defeated by centrist candidates in party leadership votes in 2018 and early 2021.

But he persisted and was finally elected party leader at the third attempt, after the centre-right’s defeat by Mr Scholz in Germany’s 2021 election.

Mr Merz cemented his power by also becoming the leader of the Union’s parliamentary group.

According to Mr Resing, Mr Merz does not believe in avoiding confrontation at all costs, but believes that “a certain amount of provocation can set off a real debate and perhaps a real development in motion”.

During the election campaign, Mr Merz vowed to make Germany’s ailing economy strong again and curb irregular migration.

With Mr Trump back in the White House and tensions rising over how to resolve the war in Ukraine, Mr Merz, who has long supported a strong trans-Atlantic relationship, said after his victory that his top priority is to unify Europe in the face of challenges coming from the United States and Russia.

Mr Merz put toughening Germany’s immigration laws at the forefront of the election campaign after a migrant killed two people in a knife attack in the Bavarian city of Aschaffenburg earlier this year.

Germany New Chancellor
Leader of the Christian Democrats Friedrich Merz (Ebrahim Noroozi/AP)

He brought a nonbinding motion before the parliament, calling for many more migrants to be turned back at Germany’s borders. The motion was narrowly approved thanks to votes from the far-right Alternative for Germany, or AfD, party.

That prompted his opponents to accuse Mr Merz of breaking a taboo in allegedly working with the AfD, and a public rebuke from Ms Merkel.

Critics pointed to the episode as an illustration of what they say is Mr Merz’s tendency to impulsiveness.

Hundreds of thousands of Germans took to the streets to protest against both Mr Merz’s motion and also the rise of the far right.

Mr Merz has insisted he did nothing wrong and never worked with AfD, and also repeatedly vowed to “never” work with the party as chancellor.

Mr Merz represents his rural region in Germany’s parliament — an area where people are “rather down-to-earth, perhaps a little reserved,” Mr Resing said.

“That’s what shaped him: rural life.”

As a politician, Mr Merz has always championed conservative values and stressed the importance of family.

He met his wife Charlotte, who is now a judge, while he was studying law, and they have three grown children.

Mr Merz joined the CDU in 1972 and was elected to the European Parliament in 1989. He first joined the German parliament in 1994.

A pilot who is openly passionate about his hobby, Mr Merz sometimes would fly his own small plane from his home in the Sauerland region in western Germany to Berlin on Monday mornings.

He has stuck to flying, despite the long hours imposed by his job as opposition leader and occasional criticism that he is indulging in a rich man’s hobby.

“When you talk to him about flying, his eyes light up,” Mr Resing said. “He says that when you’re above the clouds, that’s freedom.”

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