German Chancellor Friedrich Merz announces re-election bid for 2029 at Political Ash Wednesday in Trier.
German Chancellor Friedrich Merz announces re-election bid for 2029 at Political Ash Wednesday in Trier.
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Merz aims for second term as German chancellor

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German Chancellor Friedrich Merz announced at the Political Ash Wednesday in Trier his intention to seek a second term after the 2029 federal election. The 70-year-old cited his father's longevity and called for greater work ethic. The CDU is also preparing for its party congress in Stuttgart.

German Chancellor Friedrich Merz (CDU) stated at the Political Ash Wednesday in Trier that he intends to seek a second term after the 2029 federal election. "I have already planned to do this for a longer time," said the 70-year-old, noting that his father turned 102 in January. Merz, who turned 70 on November 11, is the oldest chancellor since Konrad Adenauer, who left office at age 87 in 1963.

Addressing Gordon Schnieder, the CDU top candidate for the Rhineland-Palatinate state election on March 22, Merz expressed hope: "If we stand here again, say in five years, then I want us both together, you as minister-president, me in office as federal chancellor, to look back and say: Those were tough times, but we then [...] made the right decisions."

CDU General Secretary Carsten Linnemann recently attested to Merz's good prospects for a long career. "He said it himself: His father is over 100 years old, his mother just under," Linnemann told the 'Stern' magazine. "So he has the genes to make politics for a very long time." However, Linnemann considered a debate on a renewed chancellorship candidacy premature: "I assume so, but that's not a question that arises in 2026."

On Friday, Merz will seek re-election as party leader for the third time at the CDU party congress in Stuttgart. In previous elections, he received 94.6 percent in 2022, later 95.3 percent, and 89.8 percent in 2024. For comparison, CSU leader Markus Söder achieved 83.6 percent in December.

In Trier, Merz called for a change in mentality: "Lifestyle and four-day week. All nice, you can do everything. But if we want to preserve our prosperity, then we all have to put our foot on the pedal now [...] Not with coercion, not with pressure, not with new laws, but simply with cheerfulness at work." He had already stated in his first government declaration in May that Germans must work more. In January, a motion from the CDU economic wing sparked debate on part-time work, now formulated without the term 'lifestyle part-time.'

The Stuttgart congress will also discuss content, including housing market ideas, a sugar tax (rejected by the party leadership), and an age limit of 16 for social media (supported by Merz). Some motions could strain the coalition with the SPD, such as those on sick notes or cannabis legalization.

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Reactions on X to Chancellor Friedrich Merz's announcement of seeking a second term after the 2029 election are predominantly skeptical and negative. Users reference poor approval ratings in polls, doubt his ability to complete the current term or win re-election, criticize his leadership as continuing Merkel's policies, and some AfD supporters prefer Alice Weidel as the next chancellor. News outlets shared the story neutrally with minimal engagement.

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At the CDU federal party congress in Stuttgart, Chancellor Friedrich Merz was confirmed as party leader with 91.2 percent of the votes. The vote was delayed by over three hours due to technical issues with digital voting, leading to paper ballots. Former Chancellor Angela Merkel missed the announcement but congratulated him via SMS.

CDU General Secretary Carsten Linnemann has assured Friedrich Merz of support ahead of the party congress in Stuttgart. Despite poor poll numbers and discontent within the party, delegates expect a strong re-election of the chancellor as party leader. The congress will also address controversial issues like a social media ban.

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In Rhineland-Palatinate's state election, the CDU won with 31 percent ahead of the SPD's 25.9 percent, ending 35 years of opposition. The AfD achieved its best result in a western German state at 19.5 percent, becoming the third strongest force. A grand coalition under CDU leader Gordon Schnieder is likely.

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In Brandenburg, SPD and CDU are close to finalizing a coalition agreement. Minister President Dietmar Woidke and CDU state leader Jan Redmann plan to present it on Wednesday. Cabinet personnel assignments remain unresolved.

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