Quit, urge Bavarian CSU doubters
November 5, 2017Seehofer defied internal calls Sunday to step aside as his Christian Social Union's (CSU) top prospect for Bavaria's 2018 state election, insisting that his goal in Berlin was to form a "stable" federal coalition in the wake of Germany's September election.
Bavaria's leader of 9 years said he was "fighting like a lion," adding that the people of Germany understandably expected beneficial political results.
Read more: Things to know about Bavaria's CSU
On Saturday, two thirds of the CSU youth conference delegates, meeting in Erlangen, had demanded that Seehofer quit his dual role as party chairman, saying Bavaria's governing party needed a "plausible" new leadership start.
'Markus, Markus'
Delegates of the CSU's Young Union (JU) treated the 50-year-old Söder, currently Bavaria's finance minister and long-time Seehofer rival, to applause and cries of "Markus, Markus."
They also criticized the absence from Erlangen of Seehofer, who was represented by his CSU confidants, Bavaria's Interior Minister Joachim Hermann and European Parliamentarian Manfred Weber, who leads EU conservatives in Strasbourg. Weber told youth delegates Seehofer deserved respect as state premier.
"The manner in which things have gone in the last few weeks has already created damage," Weber told Bild am Sonntag.
In April 2017, Seehofer declared his intention to run as state premier again in 2018, contrary to his past utterances that he might retire to his home city Ingolstadt, the headquarters of the carmaker Audi.
JU chairman Hans Reichert accused Seehofer, who first became premier and CSU chairman in 2008, of avoiding current internal party discussion.
Unfazed in Berlin, says Seehofer
Seehofer told the newspaper Bild am Sonntag he remained unfazed by the "uninterrupted barrage directed at my person," insisting his sole current task was to "impose" CSU policy at the coalition talks on forming Germany's next government, about to enter their third week in Berlin.
Involved are Chancellor Angel Merkel's nationwide conservative bloc, which combines the Bavarian CSU and her Christian Democrats (CDU) from Germany's 15 other regional states or Länder, Germany's environmentalist Greens and the pro-business liberal Free Democrats.
Only when those exploratory talks were finished would he react to his Bavaria critics "clearly and firmly," warned Seehofer who, at a 2015 CSU conference, had publicly rebuked Merkel over her decisions at the peak of Germany's refugee crisis.
Self-assumed leadership
Saturday's youth rebuff of — a trained public administration official, who from 1971 until 2008 rose through CSU ranks to become health and then agriculture minister under conservative chancellors Helmut Kohl and then in Merkel's first of three cabinets — follows other recent CSU rumblings.
Three of the CSU's ten regional branches at non-public sittings have demanded replacement of Seehofer, who in September's federal election led the traditional self-assured CSU to a six-decade low of 38.8 percent state-wide – far below 50-percent-plus returns scored by past CSU stalwarts such as Franz Josef Strauss.
Conservative slump
On September 24, Merkel's conservatives slumped nationwide to 32.9 percent as voters defected, notably to the extreme-right Alternative for Germany (AfD), but also to the liberals, the Greens and the post-communist Left party.
Since its post-war foundation in 1945, the CSU has dominated Bavaria, not only regionally from its capital Munich but also across counties and municipalities, challenged increasingly however by Bavaria's opposition Social Democrats, Greens, conservative Free Electors (Freie Wähler) and recently the AfD.
Snap survey
An Insa research institute survey done for the tabloid Bild showed that Seehofer's CSU would currently only get 37 percent in Bavaria's Munich assembly, followed by the region's opposition Social Democrats on 17 percent.
Echoing September's trends in other German states, the AfD would score 13 percent in Bavaria and its Greens 10 percent. Eight percent each would go to the Free Electors and liberal FDP.
Survey respondents were asked how they would vote if Bavaria's state assembly was elected Sunday. In 2013, the CSU clinched an absolute majority on 47.7 percent.
ipj/rc (dpa, AFP, Reuters, Münzinger)