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German election: Chancellor candidates face off over COVID, climate change and Afghanistan

  • August 30, 2021

This showdown had been eagerly awaited. On September 26, Germans will go to the polls to elect a new government, which will not be headed by Angela Merkel, who is not standing for reelection after 16 years in office. Now the three candidates to replace her had to face live questions on prime time TV.

Recent opinion polls indicate that Merkel’s center-right Christian Democratic Union (CDU/CSU), and its junior coalition partner, the center-left Social Democrats (SPD), are running neck and neck at 22%, with the Green Party not far behind. So three parties will likely need to join forces to get the necessary majority to form the next government.

CDU/CSU candidate Armin Laschet has been struggling in the polls following several gaffes

Therefore the three candidates for chancellor badly needed to score points: CDU/CSU candidate Armin Laschet is the Premier of Germany’s most populous state of North-Rhine Westphalia and has been struggling in the polls.

Olaf Scholz (SPD), current finance minister and vice-chancellor, meanwhile has seen his popularity ratings rise.

And Annalena Baerbock co-chairman of the Green Party has been trying to overcome the various hitchesthat she encountered in the early days of her campaign.

Afghanistan

Barely five minutes into the TV debate, the three politicians clashed on the topic of Afghanistan. The controversy centered on the situation of the armed forces, the Bundeswehr, which all three candidates see as underfunded and lacking adequate equipment.

Laschet was quick to rail against Scholz, accusing his SPD of having blocked the introduction of armed drones as a vital way of modernizing Germany’s army.

Scholz retaliated blaming the previous government of CDU and the pro-free market Free Democrats (FDP)  that was in power until 2013, for cutting the budget of the armed forces and failing to invest in equipment.

During his time as Federal Finance Minister, Scholz claimed, he had pushed through the “biggest increase” in the Bundeswehr budget to now over €50 billion ($59 billion).

Olaf Scholz remained calm and unemotional throughout the debate

The Greens’ Annalena Baerbock, however, who has never held government office was keen to point out what she sees as the current coalition’s failings on Afghanistan. In June, her party’s motion to evacuate more local helpers of the Bundeswehr had been voted down by the ruling coalition, she pointed out. “It was a disaster that could have been seen coming.”

COVID pandemic

On the issue of combatting the coronavirus pandemic, all three candidates stress the importance of vaccinations. They differed, however, on the topic of introducing compulsory vaccination, which only Baerbock did not rule out.

The three candidates were asked about COVID-19 restrictions on public transport: Should only people who have a negative COVID-19 test, or who have recovered from COVID-19 no more than six months ago, or those who have been fully vaccinated for two weeks or more be allowed on trains? Scholz and Baerbock were in favor of introducing this rule. Laschet refused to commit himself arguing that the introduction of such a requirement might not be easy to implement.

Laschet regularly rejects accusations of mishandling the coronavirus pandemic in his state, where infections are especially high as the fourth wave of the pandemic sweeps the country. He had responded appropriately to the different infection situations, he insisted.

Annalena Baerbock criticized her opponents for being inefficient and dishonest in combatting climate change

Combatting climate change

All three candidates vowed to push ahead with the expansion of renewable energy and climate protection — but their ideas differed on pace and methods.

Laschet and Scholz categorically rejected the idea of bans and restrictions.

Scholz spoke of making Germany “CO2-neutral in 2045”. “The path to a climate-neutral economy takes time,” he argued: “What we have to understand is that this can’t be done overnight.”

“We have to get started now, pick up the pace, reduce bureaucracy, speed up procedures,” Laschet said. In doing so, he argued, the government must rely less on bans and prohibition but rely on innovation. 

Laschet accused the Greens of an anti-industry approach, warning that stricter regulations would push industry out of Germany. “The steel industry will migrate to India and to China,” he warned.

Green Party candidate Baerbock criticized her opponents for being inefficient and dishonest. “To me, it really sounds frightening,” Baerbock said. “You just don’t want to ban anything because that might not go over so well in the election campaign.”

Baerbock suggested significantly expanding renewable energies, proposed a ban on internal combustion engines from 2030, and an obligation to install solar panels on roofs of all new buildings.

“If we don’t manage to commit the next federal government to climate neutrality, then we have a big fat problem,” she concluded.

  • German election 2021: Meet the parties’ top candidates

    Annalena Baerbock (Greens)

    At the age of 40, Annalena Baerbock has been co-chair of the Greens since 2018. A jurist with a degree in public international law from the London School of Economics, her supporters see her as a safe pair of hands with a good grasp of detail. Her opponents point to her lack of governing experience.

  • German election 2021: Meet the parties’ top candidates

    Armin Laschet (CDU)

    Armin Laschet is the national party chairman of the Christian Democrats (CDU) and serves as premier of Germany’s most populous state. Conservatives routinely underestimated the jovial 60-year-old, who is famous for his belief in integration and compromise. But, recently, his liberal noninterventionist instincts have led to him eating his words more than once during the coronavirus pandemic.

  • German election 2021: Meet the parties’ top candidates

    Olaf Scholz (SPD)

    Plumbing new depths with each election, the Social Democrats (SPD) decided to run a realist rather than a radical as their top candidate in 2021. Finance Minister Olaf Scholz, a former mayor of Hamburg, and Merkel’s deputy in the grand coalition, is seen as dry and technocratic. Many in his party say the 62-year-old is unlikely to energize party activists and win their hearts.

  • German election 2021: Meet the parties’ top candidates

    Christian Lindner (FDP)

    The 42-year-old media-savvy Christian Lindner joined the Free Democrats (FDP) at the age of just 16 and has headed the party since 2013. The reserve officer and son of a teacher comes from North Rhine-Westphalia and studied political science. He hopes to join a ruling coalition after the September election, and the conservative CDU/CSU is his declared preference.

  • German election 2021: Meet the parties’ top candidates

    Janine Wissler and Dietmar Bartsch (Left)

    The 63-year-old Dietmar Bartsch and 39-year-old Janine Wissler complement each other. Bartsch is from East Germany, a pragmatist who has led his parliamentary party since 2015. Far-left Wisseler hails from western Germany and has been the party’s co-chair since February. She represents the Left’s more radical positions, such as the immediate end to military missions abroad and all weapons exports.

  • German election 2021: Meet the parties’ top candidates

    Alice Weidel and Tino Chrupalla (AfD)

    Co-chair Tino Chrupalla, 46, joined the Alternative for Germany (AfD) in 2015, attracted to its anti-immigration platform. The painter and decorator from Saxony has been an MP since 2017 and backs the extreme-right wing, but urges moderate campaign language. Alice Weidel, a 42-year-old economist, is the co-head of the AfD in the Bundestag. AfD members have accused her of not pulling her weight.

    Author: Rina Goldenberg


Taxes

The business-friendly conservative, Laschet, accused his center-left SPD and Green opponents of planning tax hikes that would be detrimental at a time when the country is seeking to recover from the coronavirus pandemic.

Scholz, however, insisted that for particularly high-income earners, a rise of three percentage points was absolutely conceivable. Baerbock agreed, stressing that, above all, taxes must be cut for low-income earners and single parents.

Who scored points?

Baerbock accused Laschet of reading out pre-prepared notes, while Laschet accused Baerbock of trying to score points with populist phrases. Scholz, however, remained aloof and did not let himself be drawn into any heated exchange.

In a flash poll conducted by the pollster Forsa, 36% of the 2,500 respondents said Scholz had come out on top, 30% saw Baerbock in the lead and only 25% said the same for Laschet.

Live TV debates between the top candidates have become a fixture in German TV for the past 20 years. They usually pit an incumbent head of government against his challenger. This year is different because, for the first time in German post-war history, there is no incumbent chancellor campaigning for reelection.

While these high-profile debates have come to been known as “duels” — this year for the first time there are three candidates, so the term “triel” has been coined — a term that is not even in the dictionary.

There will be two more installments: On September 12 and then on September 19, the three will meet again for parts two and three of the showdown.

While you’re here: Every Tuesday, DW editors round up what is happening in German politics and society, with an eye toward understanding this year’s elections and beyond. You can sign up here for the weekly email newsletter Berlin Briefing, to stay on top of developments as Germany enters the post-Merkel era.


Article source: https://www.dw.com/en/german-election-chancellor-candidates-face-off-over-covid-climate-change-and-afghanistan/a-59021944?maca=en-rss-en-all-1573-rdf

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