


Friedrich Merz cuts a good figure abroad but is struggling at home
The chancellor may be Germany’s last chance to avoid a hard-right government
Friedrich Merz never enjoyed the honeymoon customary for a new head of government. When he stood for election to the chancellorship in the Bundestag on May 6th, he fell short of the required absolute majority on the first round. He got there on the second attempt, but it was a sign of things to come. His majority is wafer-thin. Worse, he cannot count on the loyalty of all the deputies in his coalition, made up of his centre-right Christian Democrats (CDU), their Bavarian sister party the Christian Social Union (CSU), and the Social Democratic Party (SPD).
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This article appeared in the Europe section of the print edition under the headline “The Aussenkanzler ”

Trump wants a Nobel prize. Europe can exploit that to help Ukraine
But beware the pitfalls of photo-op peacemaking

Europe is ablaze
New records are being set for devastation

Why Turkey’s football clubs can pay more cash for talent
Paradoxically, it may have to do with the country’s troubled economy
Security “guarantees” for Ukraine are dangerously hazy
The devil is in the detail on proposals from Trump, Putin and Europe
Putin’s hunger to destroy Western unity rages on
He bets on a military breakthrough or a Trump-brokered stitch-up
Putin’s “land swap” is really a grab for Ukraine’s fortress belt
He wants Trump to secure for him what Russia’s army cannot