Germany's ruling party begins its annual convention 14 years to the day since Angela Merkel entered the chancellery. But Christian Democratic Union delegates have little to celebrate.
In the dusk of her political career, Merkel has withdrawn from routine domestic affairs, and in her absence, the party has fallen to infighting. While the CDU-led bloc is still the biggest force in Germany, it's leaching votes to both the far right and the Greens and polling near historic lows.
Righting the ship is the job of Merkel's chosen successor as CDU leader, the centrist Annegret Kramp-Karrenbauer, but she's struggling to control the party a year after defeating a conservative candidate for the post. National elections are less than two years off, and the CDU has no clear candidate for chancellor.
CDU members can take little comfort from the fact their traditional Social Democratic rivals — and current coalition partners — are faring worse. The Greens are now the party to watch.
Economically, Germany is in the doldrums, its liberal world view under fire from a belligerent Trump administration and nationalist opponents across Europe.
Merkel, respected and enjoying high domestic approval ratings, has probably secured her legacy. But the future of the party she led for 18 years has seldom been less clear.
— Alan Crawford
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