Bavarian Premier Says Merkel Bloc Will Undershoot Election Goals

(Bloomberg) — Bavarian Premier Markus Soeder, who heads a key faction in Chancellor Angela Merkel’s conservative bloc, conceded that the alliance may undershoot its original goal of comfortably winning next month’s election as a poll put the Social Democrats in the lead for the first time.

With a Forsa survey showing the SPD climbing to 23% and inching ahead of Merkel’s CDU/CSU bloc on 22% — down from more than 30% as recently as March — Soeder said that the campaign would be a “head-to-head” race right up until the Sept. 26 vote.

The SPD hasn’t led in the poll conducted for RTL/ntv since October 2006, and it suggests Merkel’s alliance may be in danger of losing its grip on power for the first time since she won her debut election in 2005.

“I admit that a few weeks ago, I would have had higher goals,” Soeder, who leads the Bavaria-based Christian Social Union, said on Tuesday in a Bloomberg webinar. “That’s becoming more and more difficult -– and, one has to admit, not entirely realistic.”

The election will now be about who will succeed Merkel to lead a new government, Soeder said. The Bavarian lost an internal contest to become chancellery candidate to Armin Laschet, whose gaffe-prone campaign so far has failed to convince voters.

With Greens candidate Annalena Baerbock also on the defensive after mistakes in her campaign, Olaf Scholz, Merkel’s low-key SPD finance minister, has enjoyed a surge in momentum.

The dynamic prompted Soeder, 54, to go on the attack, offering a taste of the tactics the CDU and its CSU sister party will deploy on the campaign trail. The Bavarian conservative raised the specter of an SPD-led government that would impose “brutal indebtedness,” abandon balanced budgets and back “massive” tax hikes.

In fact, the Social Democrats have called for a looser fiscal policy and new taxes on the rich, including a wealth tax, though they support tax relief for the less wealthy. The SPD has stopped short of calling for changes to Germany’s constitutional debt brake, which imposes limits on borrowing.

“I think we can remain number one,” Soeder said, adding that current polls don’t yet reflect the bloc’s full campaign effort.

The Social Democrats were briefly ahead of Merkel’s bloc in some polls in early 2017, but Merkel went on to win the election later that year by more than 10 points, securing a fourth term.

The party that wins the most support will have the opportunity to form a ruling coalition, which is getting increasingly complex. Six parties are likely to gain enough support to enter parliament, and recent polls point to a broad range of possible combinations.

The most likely outcome is a three-way alliance, with either the SPD or the conservative bloc at the helm. The Greens and the pro-business Free Democrats could also play a role in Germany’s next government.

The Forsa poll published Tuesday had the Greens at 18%, down a point, and the pro-business Free Democrats at 12%. That would put both the SPD and the CDU in position to lead a three-way coalition with the Greens and FDP. The Aug. 17-23 survey polled 2,504 people  and has a margin of error of +/- 2.5%.

Full Backing

Soeder also took aim at the Greens, and pilloried a recent initiative to subsidize bicycles equipped to carry heavy loads or children as an alternative to cars.

Although he lost his challenge to lead the conservatives in the election, Soeder expressed his full backing for Laschet despite the CDU candidate struggling to convince voters of his leadership potential.

After a messy nomination battle, the 60-year-old state premier of North Rhine-Westphalia has committed a series of blunders on the campaign trail — including laughing in the midst of flood wreckage.

That has opened the field to Scholz, a former Hamburg mayor and trained labor lawyer. The 63-year-old has played up his experience helping protect jobs and businesses from the fallout of the coronavirus and his low-key pragmatism has similarities to Merkel, who remains Germany’s most popular politician.

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