


Amid turmoil, a fearful Germany goes to the polls
Friedrich Merz looks certain to win. But will he be able to govern?
“MANY PEOPLE…have the vague feeling that something is no longer right with our country and the situation in the world.” Writing in his final “MerzMail” dispatch before Germany’s election on Sunday Friedrich Merz, who is all but certain to take over as the tenth chancellor of the federal republic after the vote, offers not the bland optimism of the leader in waiting but the unvarnished truths of the plain speaker. “Unlike so many federal elections”, Mr Merz writes, this year’s is “marked by great uncertainty and upheaval”. Surveys of the national mood concur. Just 18% of Germans believe the country is on the right path. Rarely has such a pall of anxiety hung over an election campaign in Europe’s biggest economy.

From Wall Street banker to Vladimir Putin’s point man
Kirill Dmitriev, boss of a Russian state investment fund, wants Donald Trump to cut a deal

Germany’s mind-bending electoral maths
The more parties qualify for parliament, the harder for Friedrich Merz to form a coalition

Can Europe withstand four years of Trumpian assault?
The EU is in MAGA’s cross-hairs
Team Trump wants to get rid of Volodymyr Zelensky
America’s president calls Ukraine’s president “a dictator”
How Vladimir Putin plans to play Donald Trump
The Russian president thinks he is the better poker player
The nightmare of a Trump-Putin deal leaves Europe in shock
At an emergency meeting in Paris there are splits on sending troops to Ukraine