German coalition backs FM Steinmeier as president

Vice Chancellor of Germany, Federal Minister for Economic Affairs and Energy and chairman of the Social Democratic Party of Germany (SPD), Sigmar Gabriel, comments during a press conference in Berlin on November 14, 2016, the nomination of Germany's Foreign Minister, Frank-Walter Steinmeier, for the office of the Federal President. Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier is poised to become Germany's next president, after the two main parties in Chancellor Angela Merkel's grand right-left coalition agreed to back his nomination, party sources said on November 14, 2016. / AFP PHOTO / dpa / Michael Kappeler / Germany OUT

 

Berlin /AFP

Germany’s ruling coalition has backed Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier as the country’s next president, party sources said on Monday, paving the way for a sharp critic of Donald Trump to become head of state.
Party leaders have been wrangling for months over whom to nominate as a potential successor to President Joachim Gauck, a 76-year-old former pastor from the ex-communist East Germany who is stepping down due to his advanced age.
On Monday, Chancellor Angela Merkel’s Christian Democratic Union (CDU) agreed on Germany’s most popular politician, Steinmeier, whose name had been put forward by his Social Democratic Party (SPD).
The third party in the coalition—the CDU’s Bavarian allies CSU—backed the decision soon after. “Now it’s official,” a CSU party source said. The new president—a figure who is meant to transcend party politics and serve as a moral standard bearer for the nation—will be elected on February 12 by a special assembly of MPs, delegates from Germany’s 16 federal states and other notables.
Steinmeier, 60, has emerged in recent months as the German government’s most strident detractor of US president-elect Donald Trump.
He warned a day after Trump’s shock election that transatlantic relations would become “more difficult”.
“I think we must expect that American foreign policy will become less predictable for us and we must expect that the United States will be more inclined to make decisions on its own,” he said.
During the US campaign, Steinmeier was even more outspoken, saying the prospect of a Trump presidency was a “frightening” prospect for the world.
He also compared Trump to a “hate preacher”, saying he had much in common with “fear-mongers” in Germany’s right-wing populist AfD party as well as advocates of Britain’s exit from the EU.
Stridency and pragmatism
A veteran of the German political system and a familiar face in world capitals, Steinmeier served as Merkel’s vice-chancellor and chief diplomat during her first “grand coalition” government in 2005-2009. In his second stint as foreign minister beginning in 2013, he has at times drawn fire for attempting to keep the lines of communications open with Russia despite deteriorating relations over Ukraine. While his Social Democrats have praised his approach as in keeping with their long tradition of Ostpolitik, critics have accused him of being a “Russlandversteher” or Russia apologist.

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