ADVERTISEMENT

Spahn Vows Not to Rock the Boat in CDU Contest to Succeed Merkel

Spahn Vows Not to Rock the Boat in CDU Contest to Succeed Merkel

(Bloomberg) -- Jens Spahn, a frequent critic of German Chancellor Angela Merkel, promised there would be no dirty tricks in the contest to succeed her as party leader.

Presenting his candidacy at an event in Dusseldorf, the 38-year-old health minister backed Merkel’s plans to stay on as chancellor and said he’s looking forward to the debate with his rivals for the party chair.

"Mrs Merkel won’t be disappearing any time soon," Spahn said in a brief interview on the sidelines of the event. "I’m looking forward to robust and fair contest with the other candidates."

The withdrawal of 64-year-old Merkel from the party she’s led since the turn of the century has set off a contest to determine whether the Christian Democratic Union sticks to her centrist path or veers to the right. In the past, Spahn has chafed at Merkel’s moderate approach with barbs against burqas, the chancellor’s migration policies and the use of English in Germany that have earned him a following on the right of the party.

Joining Government

Merkel tapped him for her fourth-term cabinet in March, seeking both to promote a new generation of party leaders and to blunt his criticism by tying him in to the government. Spahn has blamed Merkel’s refusal to shut Germany’s borders to refugees in 2015 as the main reason her bloc lost votes in state elections in Bavaria and Hesse.

“The images from that time and the impression that the state and politics lost a degree of control don’t easily disappear from the memories of the people,” he wrote Wednesday in Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung. He said the CDU needs to settle this debate before it can move forward.

Born and raised near Germany’s border with the Netherlands, Spahn joined the CDU’s youth organization when he was 15 and trained as a bank clerk before becoming a member of the lower house of parliament when he was 22. In 2015, he became a state secretary in the German finance ministry.

To replace Merkel as CDU leader at a party convention in December, Spahn is competing with party general secretary Annegret Kramp-Karrenbauer, a Merkel protegee, and Friedrich Merz, a one-time antagonist who will challenge Spahn for support from conservatives.

"I hold Mr. Merz in very high esteem," Spahn said Wednesday night.

To contact the reporter on this story: William Wilkes in Frankfurt at wwilkes1@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Chad Thomas at cthomas16@bloomberg.net, Chris Reiter, Ben Sills

©2018 Bloomberg L.P.