CDU leaders Friedrich Merz and Carsten Linnemann on stage at the Stuttgart party congress, symbolizing unity and strong re-election support amid challenges.
CDU leaders Friedrich Merz and Carsten Linnemann on stage at the Stuttgart party congress, symbolizing unity and strong re-election support amid challenges.
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Linnemann assures Merz support ahead of CDU congress in Stuttgart

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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.

The CDU federal party congress takes place on Friday and Saturday in Stuttgart, where Friedrich Merz, chancellor for one year, will stand for re-election as party chairman. This is the first such election since he took office. One year after the Bundestag election on February 23, 2025, which became necessary after the collapse of the Ampel coalition in November 2024, the Union-SPD coalition and the chancellor are facing poor poll numbers and no majority.

Merz, 70 years old, received around 95 percent in his first election in 2022 and around 90 percent in 2024. Abstentions count as invalid votes in the CDU. During a hall tour, he acknowledged: "some dissatisfaction and some criticism." Linnemann assured after consultations of the top committees: "We will strengthen his back in incredibly difficult times." He did not specify percentages.

Around 1000 delegates will review a 400-page motion book. Votes include a social media ban supported by Merz and a sugar tax on sodas opposed by the party leadership. The executive proposes that building applications be deemed approved after three months without response.

Surprisingly, Angela Merkel will attend the first day; she rarely appears at party events. Merz demands discipline and has restricted alcohol service during sessions. The congress includes 1001 delegates, 1400 guests, and over 500 media representatives. The oldest delegate is Heinz Riesenhuber (90), the youngest Nico Grosse (22).

In Baden-Württemberg, where elections are on March 8, Manuel Hagel (37) sees tailwind from the federal CDU.

O que as pessoas estão dizendo

X users react to Carsten Linnemann's assurance of support for Friedrich Merz's re-election at the CDU congress in Stuttgart with a mix of neutral reporting from journalists, alongside predominantly negative sentiments from AfD-affiliated accounts and critics accusing the CDU leadership of inconsistency, betrayal of voters, and ineffective policies amid poor polls.

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Friedrich Merz celebrates re-election as CDU leader with 91.2% of votes at Stuttgart congress amid paper ballot voting.
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Friedrich Merz re-elected as CDU leader with 91.2 percent

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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.

The CDU showed great unity at its 38th federal party congress in Stuttgart, confirming Chancellor and party leader Friedrich Merz with 91.2 percent. Despite government challenges, the party avoided confrontations with coalition partner SPD. General Secretary Carsten Linnemann also received a strong result with 90.5 percent.

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