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Party foundations

September 19, 2010

An ally of Chancellor Angela Merkel says the emergence of a populist party to the right of the Christian Democrats is a real threat. While Merkel is less worried, she has similar ideas about quashing any such danger.

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German Chancellor Angela Merkel and Saxony Anhalt premier Wolfgang Boehmer
Boehmer and Merkel both think practical action will helpImage: AP

An ally of Chancellor Angela Merkel has warned that her Christian Democrat CDU could face a challenge if a new party were to emerge on the right.

In response to fears that the party could face a challenge on its right flank, Wolfgang Boehmer - who is CDU premier of the state of Saxony Anhalt - warned against complacency.

Saxony Anhalt premier Wolfgang Boehmer
Boehmer said the party had to be constantly on guardImage: AP

"The danger that a populist right-wing party might emerge always exists," said Boehmer in the German daily newspaper Hamburger Abendblatt on Saturday. "even if at the moment we cannot recognize who could lead it. We must always be on our guard and undertake everything to avoid the founding of another party to the right of our own."

When asked if the party was adhering sufficiently to its conservative roots, Boehmer said that constant vigilance was necessary.

"We have to repeatedly pose the question of whether conservatives identify with the CDU," he said.

As a mainstream party, said the premier, it was not possible for the CDU to move too far to the right. Instead, he said, the problems that were important to ordinary people should be clearly addressed. "That is the best immunization against far right extremist attitudes," said Boehmer.

Chancellor takes threat in stride

Playing down the threat, Merkel told the Sueddeutsche Zeitung on Saturday that she did not believe there was a real danger.

The chancellor said that it was the responsibility of "democratic parties, to prevent the foundation of new parties on the extreme right as well as the left through our politics."

While Merkel was not as concerned as Boehmer, her ideas about how to head off any potential threat was similar. The chancellor said practical solutions to genuine grievances and concerns were the answer.

"We should do more than define what the grievances are, we have to solve the problems," said Merkel. "Then we will not need to worry about new parties on the fringe."

Environment minister Norbert Roettgen
Roettgen said the party needed to host more open debateImage: AP

Merkel added that she would endeavor to make sure the views of conservatives were represented within the party.

State of debate 'depressing'

Environment Minister Norbert Roettgen said that he believed that the party needed to be more open to debate, saying that its present state was "depressing."

"We must once again make the party a place for discussion and opinion-forming," he told the website of German news magazine Spiegel on Saturday.

Suggestions that a party to the right of the CDU would attract popular support were made by party conservative Erika Steinbach, who is to stand down from her post on the party's national executive board.

Steinbach, head of the German Federation of Expellees, announced her resignation from the board after making comments about Poland's part in the build up to World War II earlier this month.

The politician, whose federation represents ethnic Germans who were forced to flee eastern Europe at the end of the war, was accused of historical revisionism and said she felt increasingly isolated on the party's right.

Author: Richard Connor (KNA/dpa/Reuters/AFP)
Editor: Andreas Illmer