In the end, Annegret Kramp-Karrenbauer's departure was more decisive than her 13 months at the helm of Germany's ruling Christian Democratic Union.
Kramp-Karrenbauer quit today as the leader of Angela Merkel's party and the chancellor's intended successor, taking the fall for a regional chapter that openly disobeyed her and aligned with the far-right AfD in an eastern state assembly.
In doing so, AKK, as she is known, blows open the race to succeed Merkel. Yet by acting resolutely, she caught out her critics and gave the CDU valuable time to find an alternative able to fight elections due next year.
AKK's political future was evaporating in any case: She'd been struggling for months, and lost Merkel's backing. Who will replace her is unclear. A new CDU leader may not be chosen until the next party convention in December.
Meanwhile, there is no evidence that members want to veer away from Merkel's centrist course any more now than when they elected AKK in December 2018.
The episode certainly doesn't burnish the CDU's credentials at a time when it's polling at historic lows. But surveys also suggest AfD support has peaked.
If there's a winner from all this it's the Greens. Untainted by the scandal, they look more electable by the day.
— Alan Crawford
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