Who will be the next CDU chairman?
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  Who will be the next CDU chairman?
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Question: Who is most likely to become the next CDU chairman?
#1
Annegret Kramp-Karrenbauer
 
#2
Friedrich Merz
 
#3
Jens Spahn
 
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Total Voters: 47

Author Topic: Who will be the next CDU chairman?  (Read 10834 times)
Tender Branson
Mark Warner 08
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« Reply #125 on: December 08, 2018, 12:37:03 AM »

The result was very close to my prediction, just the other way around with AKK winning by a bit.

The AKK win was a last show of loyalty to Merkel from the CDU-delegates, but the 48-49% for Merz also show how much she has done wrong over the past years ...
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« Reply #126 on: December 08, 2018, 05:23:01 AM »

Before posing the question who may become the next CDU chancellery candidate, the question who will succeed AKK as general secretary must be solved. Young Union chairman Paul Ziemiak is being discussed.

I will now accept my accolades!
He, however, received a very low result: 62.8%.

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President Johnson
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« Reply #127 on: December 08, 2018, 05:55:41 AM »

Before posing the question who may become the next CDU chancellery candidate, the question who will succeed AKK as general secretary must be solved. Young Union chairman Paul Ziemiak is being discussed.

I will now accept my accolades!
He, however, received a very low result: 62.8%.



Some of the deputies might get even less. Almost SPD-style results Tongue
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America Needs R'hllor
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« Reply #128 on: December 08, 2018, 06:24:31 AM »

Great news! I hope the voters of Germany will prove everyone wrong and not embrace the reactionary "populism" of the AfD, and I hope AKK has the good sense to move the CDU right on immigration while remaining a moderate on other issues.
I would, however, like to see a Green-lead Government, if only because of how interesting it would be Tongue
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« Reply #129 on: December 08, 2018, 06:39:35 AM »

Some of the deputies might get even less. Almost SPD-style results Tongue

I can see Nahles literally rejoicing over AKK's result. Now she can officially say that she had a higher vote tally than hers when elected chairwoman. 😂

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Lechasseur
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« Reply #130 on: December 08, 2018, 06:50:30 AM »

Frankly at the next German election, if I had to chose between the CDU and the Greens, I'd vote for the Greens. If you have the choice between two leftist parties, might as well vote for the honest leftists
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republicanbayer
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« Reply #131 on: December 08, 2018, 07:41:50 AM »

Before posing the question who may become the next CDU chancellery candidate, the question who will succeed AKK as general secretary must be solved. Young Union chairman Paul Ziemiak is being discussed.

I will now accept my accolades!
He, however, received a very low result: 62.8%.



What's interesting is that Ziemiak is the leader of the party's youth wing Junge Union, whose delegates mainly backed Spahn in the first round and were expected to support Merz in the second round. As we all know now, more delegates than expected switched from Spahn to AKK. Even though AKK and Ziemiak both say that there was no deal between them, it seems likely that there was one. Merz' delegates didn't like that, which is the reason for Ziemiak's bad result.
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Grand Wizard Lizard of the Klan
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« Reply #132 on: December 08, 2018, 09:13:27 AM »

Before posing the question who may become the next CDU chancellery candidate, the question who will succeed AKK as general secretary must be solved. Young Union chairman Paul Ziemiak is being discussed.

I will now accept my accolades!
He, however, received a very low result: 62.8%.




Polish fifth column in CDU, great. And I guess this is some sort of compromise, Ziemiak is rather conservative. As for the deal Ziemiak even few days before congress it was pretty sure that he will vote Merz so probably there was some secret deal because such sudden changes are rather rare without any earlier decisions.
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DavidB.
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« Reply #133 on: December 08, 2018, 09:19:39 AM »

Before posing the question who may become the next CDU chancellery candidate, the question who will succeed AKK as general secretary must be solved. Young Union chairman Paul Ziemiak is being discussed.
Apparently Ziemiak is 33 years old. In Germany, you lead the youth wing at 33 years old. In the Netherlands, you lead the party.
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Tender Branson
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« Reply #134 on: December 08, 2018, 10:27:00 AM »

Before posing the question who may become the next CDU chancellery candidate, the question who will succeed AKK as general secretary must be solved. Young Union chairman Paul Ziemiak is being discussed.
Apparently Ziemiak is 33 years old. In Germany, you lead the youth wing at 33 years old. In the Netherlands, you lead the party.

Same here.

Youth wings of parties are typically led by 16-20 year olds here ...
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« Reply #135 on: December 08, 2018, 12:02:29 PM »

The very first thing Paul Ziemiak ought to do with his newly earned salary is having his eyelids shortened. I've been wondering for years how he can see through those mini-lids.

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PSOL
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« Reply #136 on: December 08, 2018, 01:11:35 PM »

Before posing the question who may become the next CDU chancellery candidate, the question who will succeed AKK as general secretary must be solved. Young Union chairman Paul Ziemiak is being discussed.
Apparently Ziemiak is 33 years old. In Germany, you lead the youth wing at 33 years old. In the Netherlands, you lead the party.

Same here.

Youth wings of parties are typically led by 16-20 year olds here ...
The CDU must be made of real extreme geezers for 33 years to be considered young.
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Lord Halifax
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« Reply #137 on: December 08, 2018, 03:32:55 PM »

Before posing the question who may become the next CDU chancellery candidate, the question who will succeed AKK as general secretary must be solved. Young Union chairman Paul Ziemiak is being discussed.
Apparently Ziemiak is 33 years old. In Germany, you lead the youth wing at 33 years old. In the Netherlands, you lead the party.

That's nothing, you can be a Young Republican to 40.

Same here.

Youth wings of parties are typically led by 16-20 year olds here ...
The CDU must be made of real extreme geezers for 33 years to be considered young.
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Aurelio21
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« Reply #138 on: December 08, 2018, 04:42:32 PM »
« Edited: December 08, 2018, 05:18:26 PM by Aurelio21 »


What's interesting is that Ziemiak is the leader of the party's youth wing Junge Union, whose delegates mainly backed Spahn in the first round and were expected to support Merz in the second round. As we all know now, more delegates than expected switched from Spahn to AKK. Even though AKK and Ziemiak both say that there was no deal between them, it seems likely that there was one. Merz' delegates didn't like that, which is the reason for Ziemiak's bad result.

This is called "strategy": Ziemiak is a placeholder for the alliance of AKK and Spahn. AKK is the placeholder for Merkel. Spahn supporting Merz does not make any sense for Spahn as Merz's Andenpakt(To Name a few: T.Strobl(Schaeuble's son in law), FJ Jung and Roland Koch) has a lot of more figures with much more seniority/leading expertise than him. Socially Spahn Maybe more on Merz's side. Everybody here underestimated the fact that:
A) Spahn would have risked losing his ministry for health if Merz had prevailed. Merz would have forced Merkel to resign and called a snap election for himself with a big win for the CDU. Unlike with Merkel we would see at least a minority CDU/CSU/FDP coalition tolerated by the AfD. The FDP might look as more contemporary CDU, in reality she is a pure lobby association of the hotel, pharmaceutical and physician industry. Spahn would certainly have lost his current job to an FDP appointee and would likely be degraded to a minor post. Certainly not Minister of Finance(R Koch), Interior(Th Strobl), Justice(typical FDP appointee) or Defence (FJ Jung or Gutti).
B) Economically, he is more left/liberal as AKK. He re-introduced the parity funding the health care fund by employers and employees, decreed a pay raise for health care industry employees and raised the mandatory health care insurance tax.

By the way, my uncle and cousin are deeply disappointed. This way the CDU will have trouble crossing the 30 % treshold and is in danger of losing the leading position to the Greens if they nominate W Kretschmann(definitely a longshot yet the taste of power makes anything possible)


And let's be clear:
-The alliance AKK-Spahn has only a support of 62 % within the decision making class
- Mini-Me AKK will be blamed for every furher misstep yet Merkel will get the benefit
-As soon as Merkel is gone, who will keep this extremely heterogenous coalition together?
- Mr Ziemiak headed the JU, which was pro-Merz. Will he be able to keep out of trouble or will be seen as traitor within the JU?
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« Reply #139 on: December 08, 2018, 07:27:31 PM »

And let's be clear:
-The alliance AKK-Spahn has only a support of 62 % within the decision making class
- Mini-Me AKK will be blamed for every furher misstep yet Merkel will get the benefit
-As soon as Merkel is gone, who will keep this extremely heterogenous coalition together?
- Mr Ziemiak headed the JU, which was pro-Merz. Will he be able to keep out of trouble or will be seen as traitor within the JU?

Imagine the following scenario: Snap elections are occurring, Merz is nominated as the chancellery candidate, and the Greens will become the strongest party.
The triumvirate Merz/AKK/Ziemiak (the Spahn surrogate) would be annihilated and therefore engulf the CDU in a grave crisis.
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Aurelio21
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« Reply #140 on: December 08, 2018, 09:28:40 PM »
« Edited: December 08, 2018, 11:00:34 PM by Aurelio21 »

And let's be clear:
-The alliance AKK-Spahn has only a support of 62 % within the decision making class
- Mini-Me AKK will be blamed for every furher misstep yet Merkel will get the benefit
-As soon as Merkel is gone, who will keep this extremely heterogenous coalition together?
- Mr Ziemiak headed the JU, which was pro-Merz. Will he be able to keep out of trouble or will be seen as traitor within the JU?

Imagine the following scenario: Snap elections are occurring, Merz is nominated as the chancellery candidate, and the Greens will become the strongest party.
The triumvirate Merz/AKK/Ziemiak (the Spahn surrogate) would be annihilated and therefore engulf the CDU in a grave crisis.

Thanks for the reply. Your scenario is only hypothetical.

If your triumvirn called a snap election, this would be clearly political suicide. Mr Merz would have to "run" under AKK's conditions as center to center left candidate. His buddies from the "Andenpakt" would be marignalized thus they have no incentive to support Mr Merz, and he would have lost all credibility. The CDU would try to run as AfD lite and Greens lite at once, which cannot work. The political trend of tribalism is palpable in Germany, too.

Under AKK, there will be no candidacy of Mr Merz. She is obliged to Mrs Merkel and PM Armin Laschet of NRW. Thus instead of Merkel, either she or more likely PM Laschet will run. Keep in mind that Mr Spahn and the NRW CDU(home of Mr Laschet and the CDU caucus chair powerhouse R Brinkhaus) oviously saved her candidacy and thus for some time Mrs Merkel.

There will be no compromise candadidacy of Mr Merz, as he will rather do what he already did and stay out of politics until the cries of a CDU defeated by a Greens/AfD Maelstrohm will call for him leaving his self-proposed political exile.

Why could be Mrs Merkel successful at all with moving the CDU to the center? Because her predecessor destroyed the SPD. Before Mr Schroeder, the SPD was strong in several rural areas stemming from the industralisation of the 2nd industrial revolution. She appealed to the relative social conservative and economical left working class. Now she leaves them as well for social center left positions and contradictory economical policies(as mententioned above, reverting the social cuts of her CDU/CSU/FDP coalition).

But now with the catasrophical results of ALL her policies (immigration, social security, currency etc) the FDP and AfD cannot form a coaltion with her as an anathema to all disgruntled center-right and conservatives. Just look what happened at the "Jamaica" negotiations: Even the flip-flopping FDP would not approve of her -  as they would lose all her voters to AfD or non-voting.

Thus I conclude (and the center-right to conservative majority(socially/culturally) in Germany still exists. Mr Merz would be an idiot (which he clearly is not proven by his strategical retreat after 2005) if he would serve as figure head for Mrs Merkel misguided policies with the CDU.

(Added/Edited): Are you somehow affiliated with a leading position within a german political party? 6.3.2019 as possible day of the dissolution of the Bundestag did not occur to me yet sounds logical thinking from an inner party official. This would fail as President Steinmeier would have to decide whether to call an election. This is totally up to him, he is not the Queen of England who acts on advice of the Prime Minister. He will definitely not deliver certain doom to his Party, the SPD.

It is true that a faked failed motion of confidence happened 2 times before, yet under total different circumstances: 1) Mr Kohl wanted the popular mandate after ousting Mr Schmidt 2) Mr Schroeder had made a deal with Mr Putin about the Chair of Gazprom(thus the name GasGerd, and Mr Putin meddling in elections of other countries is not quite as new as one might think ;-) ) and needed an excuse for leaving the office. For all his failings, he is by far the most competent campaigner the SPD ever had with winning an unwinnable election in 2002 and reducing the difference to the CDU from 20 % to 1% in 2005. In both cases the President was CDU affiliated and a CDU victory imminent.
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« Reply #141 on: December 09, 2018, 01:35:13 AM »

  Aurelio, do you really think a Merz led minority coalition government of CDU/CSU FDP supported by AFD would have been feasible?  Would the FDP have wanted to be part of it, and what about the more centrist, left wing element in the CDU, which clearly is substantial in that it just narrowly elected AKK, would they have allowed it to happen?
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« Reply #142 on: December 09, 2018, 02:15:40 AM »
« Edited: December 09, 2018, 03:13:30 AM by Aurelio21 »

 Aurelio, do you really think a Merz led minority coalition government of CDU/CSU FDP supported by AFD would have been feasible?  Would the FDP have wanted to be part of it, and what about the more centrist, left wing element in the CDU, which clearly is substantial in that it just narrowly elected AKK, would they have allowed it to happen?

Not directly. With an "negative majority" and a successful chancellor election in the 3rd ballot, a plurality is needed. A Chancellor can only be replaced by an majority vote of another candidate(50 %+1 vote of all members of the Bundestag). The Bundestag cannot dissolve itself, only after a failed motion of confidence.

After the 2017 election, the SPD excluded herself from any coalition for evermore. After the failed Jamaica attempt, there was a short period in which a CDU/CSU/FDP would have been possible, but Mrs Merkel refused. She wanted a CDU/SPD coalition very badly, and knew the President Steinmeier wanted the same.

Mr Merz is not compatible with any leftist party. Unlike Mrs Merkel he is willing to take calculated risks. And the FDP basically is a joke, it will flip-flop for the highest bidder as she desperately needs the health care and commerce ministry for serving her masters. Plus she is completely on board on any taxation reform proposed by Mr Merz. "Centrist" suggests that there are any principles, finding these within the FDP would take the same time as filling a black hole. Mr Lindner backing of the CDU/CSU/Greens/FDP coalition does not count, as the FDP would not only get nothing out ouf the pact(except maybe a tax cut for the hotel industry :-P) but lose all her voters from the CDU electing them as they could not stomach the AfD or abstention and thus being constantly blackmailed with a snap election by Angela Merkel.

The left wing of the CDU consists of 2 parts:
The "inner SPD" of the CDU would take a back seat, just like under any other CDU chancellor before and the remnant of the real SPD in the Merkel Government. Mr Merz would promote Mr Laumann from NRW and other affiliates from the CDA to a chief positions in lesser ministries. Except for Mr Altmaier. That's all they want, as you see in our Government, they are totally overchallenged(think: Mr Altmaier) of formulating consistent policies except for extending the welfare state.
The Merkelistas would simply leave the party and go back to the Greens, where they came from. And are already doing, see election in Hesse. Nobody would miss them with their PC double talk.

The AfD will not enter any government itself. This would be the foreseeable doom as the party is nothing more than mainly a collection of failed politicians of CDU, CSU, FDP and to an lesser extent SPD.The party "leadership" knows this, but a tacit tolerance would be acceptable/desirable.

This would work the following way:
1) After the 3rd ballot, Mr Merz is elected. As chancellor, he can name a cabinett at his will. The president will accept it.
2) The SPD and other parties on the left( I am looking at you, the Greens on economical issues) will occasionally collaborate out of fear. Just think of Heinrich Bruening. Any motion of no confidence will fail as the AfD will not pass it and elect an SPD or Greens chancellor*ess*
3) If any greater crisis occurs, Mr Merz will call out something called "Gesetzgebungsnotstand". This rather obscure provision allows governing with the Bundesrat instead of the Bundestag. The thread of taking the AfD into government and the necessities of Consensus play into Mr Merz strategy of indulging fear on the leftist parties of a AfD takeover. Mr Steinmeier as seen is a total snowflake and avoids any confrontation which would be abused by Mr Merz.
4) Depending on how successful Mr Merz fulfills his chancellorship (highly likely as he has demonstrated all his life - except for Mrs Merkel (only god knows why, or Mrs Merkel's agent handler ;-) ): The former CDU and FDP members within the AfD will desert the party and realign with their former affiliation and thus likely leading on an own CDU/FDP majority.

My assessment of the AfD(to understand my balanced approach to these topics):
The AfD has many sensible positions(reverse immigration, Islam, Euro, EU, taxation laws) , even overtaking the SPD on the left sometimes(e g temporary employment rules). But these are contradicting themselves in total. And then there are some problematic positions, too(understating). Personally, I see them as unelectable. As mentioned, they are mainly a bunch of failed persons which are even beneath GOP standards regarding civility. Until now, every caucus on federal or state level has excluded at least 2 members and/or has thrown their own party leaders out of the state or county caucus. I cannot fathom the abuse of power if these people took over a ministry or even the chancellory! They would just like Donald Trump discredit any sensible issue they have, for the gain of parties like the Linke or the Greens.
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Yeahsayyeah
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« Reply #143 on: December 09, 2018, 06:16:14 AM »

One point, that isn't really taken into account in this whole "The CDU should take a pronounced step rightward" discussion is, that they have to govern with SPD and Greens anyway, if they want to avoid the AfD. And I think, they still want to (You don't govern with a party or even ask for tacit support, that you called "openly national socialist" a few months prior, as Merz did. THIS would be political suicide). So they can't actually turn to much to the right and a turn that is merely rhethorical without much substance won't help them or could even backfire (see: Bavarian state election).
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« Reply #144 on: December 09, 2018, 07:22:22 AM »
« Edited: December 09, 2018, 07:49:00 AM by Aurelio21 »

And I think, they still want to (You don't govern with a party or even ask for tacit support, that you called "openly national socialist" a few months prior, as Merz did. THIS would be political suicide). So they can't actually turn to much to the right and a turn that is merely rhethorical without much substance won't help them or could even backfire (see: Bavarian state election).


Have you ever heard of "plausible deniability" ? He would just form a minority government, after everything else fails. There would be no need for talking with the AfD as e g a CDU at 36 % and a FDP at 9 % and an AfD at 13 % there would be no way of a successful constructive motion of no confidence.

And I seem to have lived in a parallel universe as the CSU had dropped to 33 in pre-election polls, switched their message to "no experiments" and than got 37 % in the real poll. CSU+FDP+FW+AfD had about the same percentage as CSU+FDP+FW in the previous election.

Only in the elections of 1998, 2002 and 2005 there was no majority of CDU+FDP(and from 2013 with AfD+FW), if you do not take the 5 % treshold in account.

If you do not want to pay attention to detail like quite a lot AfD-elected officials in parliaments on various levels leave their party and re-affiliate with their former parties, that's OK with me.

And if you do not want to see the total mess taking 1.5 million migrants (sorry, i should have said according to the Green ideology, they are all professionals, like maximally invasive surgery) into our social security systems has caused, then keep on dreaming. As soon as a recession caused by Trump's tariffs hits us, and the DUH shuts down the german main industry, who will pay for them then?
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ag
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« Reply #145 on: December 09, 2018, 09:32:44 PM »

And I think, they still want to (You don't govern with a party or even ask for tacit support, that you called "openly national socialist" a few months prior, as Merz did. THIS would be political suicide). So they can't actually turn to much to the right and a turn that is merely rhethorical without much substance won't help them or could even backfire (see: Bavarian state election).


Have you ever heard of "plausible deniability" ? He would just form a minority government, after everything else fails.

And why would everything else fail? And why would he actually prefer a minority government supported from the outside by the AfD to a majority government with other mainstream parties?
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