topics
tools
Expatica countries
Index Last Var.(%)
BEL 20 2119.44 0.28
DAX 6339.94 0.38
IBEX 30 6543 0.13
CAC 40 3047.94 0.32
FTSE 100 5351.53 0.03
AEX 292.76 0.23
DJIA 12454.83 -0.60
Nasdaq 2837.53 -0.07
FTSE MIB 13154.8 0.36
TSX Composite 11576.47 0.09
ASX 4081.2 -0.61
Hang seng 18713.41 0.25
Straits Times 2772.75 -0.24
ISEQ 20 500.94 1.55
You are here: Home News News Focus Merkel: From Kohl's 'girl' to world's...
Enlarge font Decrease font Text size


25/09/2009Merkel: From Kohl's 'girl' to world's most powerful woman

Merkel: From Kohl's 'girl' to world's most powerful woman Germany’s first female leader and the youngest person to become chancellor stands to lead the country for a second term Sunday.

German Chancellor Angela Merkel, seeking a second term at the helm of Europe's biggest economy, has enjoyed a remarkable rise from East German bumpkin to Forbes magazine's world's most powerful woman.

The 55-year-old trained physicist developed the fighting instinct and chameleon-like qualities in the communist East that propelled her to become Germany's first female leader and the youngest person to become chancellor.

An apple-cheeked pastor's daughter, Merkel completed her unlikely ascent to power in 2005 as she took the reins of an unwieldy "grand coalition" of her conservatives and the Social Democrats after an inconclusive election.

An admittedly less-than-gifted public speaker, Merkel has relied on meticulous preparation, gentle humour and a modest style to lead Europe's most populous country and strongest economic power.

Passive leadership?


But critics accuse her of passive leadership, waiting out feuds until a compromise has emerged and depriving the administration of a clear course.

Merkel has clung to her circumspect tactics in her campaign against Social Democrat Frank-Walter Steinmeier, her vice-chancellor and foreign minister, refusing to engage him in policy clashes and riding on her personal popularity.

"What, and whom, does Angela Merkel stand for?" the daily Berliner Zeitung asked in an analysis of her "mysterious" character this month. "Nobody knows. And that is the secret to her success."

AFP PHOTO / JOHN MACDOUGALL
Combo of pictures taken in September 2009 in Berlin shows some of the electoral posters of the main parties, Christian Democrats (CDU), Social Democrats (SPD), Free Democrats (FDP), the Greens and Die Linke (The left party), in the German general elections taking place on 27 September 2009.

Merkel recently dismissed conservative critics who got skittish over whether her above-the-fray style would lead them to victory.

"I am not going to become more aggressive but rather put my arguments in the foreground," she said.

Her cautious approach also drew fire as the financial crisis whipsawed through global markets late last year, with Merkel dubbed "Madame Non" by fellow leaders expecting a bigger German stimulus effort.
[!break!]
Policy coups

Merkel has racked up a number of foreign policy triumphs over the years, including a hard-fought compromise on the EU budget in 2005 and a climate deal under her 2007 G8 presidency that earned her the admiring nickname "Miss World."

But she has stepped on toes to defend national interests, as when she brokered a deal to sell ailing carmaker Opel, a key employer, to her favoured buyer backed by Russian capital, or fought off EU emissions caps on behalf of German heavy industry.

As host to the 2006 football World Cup, Merkel presided over a rediscovery of patriotism in a country still haunted by its Nazi past, as its cities and stadiums became a sea of German flags.

She also mended what she saw as her predecessor Gerhard Schroeder's strident break with Washington over the Iraq war.

But she has seemed immune to US President Barack Obama's charms, openly challenging him over his handling of the economic crisis, sparking rumours of a rift they have fought to dispel.

A brilliant student

Angela Kasner, as she was known then, left Hamburg, West Germany a few weeks after her birth when her father, a Protestant preacher, decided to work in the communist East.

AFP PHOTO JOHN MACDOUGALLLocals remember her as a brilliant student who learned compromise and discretion early on to cope as a Christian in a totalitarian state.

"She could always adapt well -- we all learned to do that in the GDR (East Germany) from the time we were children," said Elke Schulz, who was a schoolmate of Angela's from the age of 15. "Each of us had to have two faces."

Merkel earned a physics doctorate and stayed out of politics until the Berlin Well fell 20 years ago.

In 1990, she joined the CDU and won a parliamentary seat in the former East Germany, beginning her rise to the chancellery.

Merkel had to endure the fond but patronising nickname "the girl" bestowed by her mentor, then-Chancellor Helmut Kohl, who made her minister for women's issues and later environmental affairs.

But in 2000, the frumpy newcomer rose to the head of the CDU when she alone had the courage to tell Kohl to quit as party chairman in a slush fund scandal.

It earned her powerful enemies in the CDU, a party dominated by Roman Catholic, West German family men where she has always been something of a misfit as a twice-married childless woman from the east.

Her husband of 11 years, chemist Joachim Sauer, is so publicity-shy he opted not to attend Merkel's inauguration in 2005.

Deborah Cole/AFP/Expatica


0 reactions to this article

0 reactions to this article

Discussion Forums

Australians in Germany

BUY FAKE PASSPORT, DRIVING LICENSE,ID CARD

Irish in Germany

BUY FAKE PASSPORT, DRIVING LICENSE,ID CARD

Canadian in Germany

BUY FAKE PASSPORT, DRIVING LICENSE,ID CARD

Discuss German Culture

BUY FAKE PASSPORT, DRIVING LICENSE,ID CARD

Americans in Germany

BUY FAKE PASSPORT, DRIVING LICENSE,ID CARD

participate in the forums

Inside Expatica
The ABCs of the German school system

The ABCs of the German school system

What you need to know about German schools and daycare.

German immigration and residency regulations

German immigration and residency regulations

Want to move to Germany but haven’t figured out the details? Check out Expatica’s overview of the German permit system.

Driving in Berlin: Rules, habits and fines

Driving in Berlin: Rules, habits and fines

In part one of our two part series, we cover the driving culture in Berlin, where to park and buy gas and, most importantly, the laws.

Looking for work in Germany: The in depth version

Looking for work in Germany: The in depth version

Our comprehensive guide includes information on how to find work, recruitment agencies, employment contracts and labour law.