New Head Of Merkel's CDU Misfires With Pandemic Comments
Armin Laschet, the new head of Germany's conservative CDU party, is known as an ally of Angela Merkel -- but has come under fire for distancing himself from the chancellor's pandemic policy.
Laschet won the CDU leadership race in January on a promise to continue Merkel's moderate course when she retires this year, but is still struggling in public opinion polls seven months ahead of a general election.
With two crucial state elections looming in mid-March, Laschet this week laid into the Merkel government's coronavirus strategy, urging it not to "treat citizens like helpless children".
But the comments have left the political centrist from Aachen, who turns 60 on Thursday, accused of flip-flopping and pandering to populists.
Merkel and Germany's regional leaders last week extended the country's partial lockdown until March 7.
But they agreed that some measures could be relaxed once the incidence rate falls to 35 new cases per 100,000 residents over a seven-day period.
The government had earlier set an incidence target of 50 but revised it downward due to concerns over more contagious virus variants.
"You can't keep inventing new limits as a way of preventing life from happening again," railed Laschet on Monday during a CDU meeting in Baden-Wuerttemberg -- one of the two states holding elections in March.
"We can't measure our whole lives just by incidence rates," Laschet said.
"There still seems to be this popular attitude of 'ban everything, be strict, treat citizens like helpless children'."
Germany's Bild daily, long a vocal critic of the government's coronavirus policy, lauded Laschet for merely "saying out loud what many people are thinking".
But others pointed out that, as the head of Germany's most populous state of North Rhine-Westphalia, Laschet had himself attended last week's meeting and signed off on the new threshold.
The incidence rate for the whole of Germany was hovering at around 57 on Wednesday and had fallen below 50 in three states, including the capital Berlin.
Parts of the CDU have been crying out for a return to normality, urging the government to take into account not just the incidence rate but other factors such as the number of Covid-19 patients in hospital.
But Laschet's comments have given ammunition to his opponents, especially the centre-left Social Democrats (SPD), currently in coalition with the CDU but becoming increasingly combative as the election draws near.
Lars Klingbeil, general secretary of the SPD, accused Laschet of flip-flopping and "clumsy populism".
There was criticism too from the Green party, seen as a potential new coalition partner for the CDU in Germany's next government.
The CDU has seen its popularity slip in recent opinion polls, hurt by increasing public frustration with the government's recent handling of the pandemic.
But this is largely down to "the chaos of the vaccination campaign, rather than disaffection with the lockdown", according to political scientist Oskar Niedermayer at Berlin's Free University.
Laschet's comments are a "mistake", he told AFP: "This U-turn reinforces his image as a politician without a clear line of conduct in crisis management."
Laschet has come under fire before over his handling of the pandemic in North Rhine-Westphalia.
During the first wave last year, he pushed aggressively for the loosening of restrictions -- only to backtrack after a huge outbreak at a slaughterhouse.
The question of who will lead Germany's conservatives to the polls will be decided in the spring, with Laschet up against Markus Soeder, the head of the CDU's sister party in Bavaria.
Soeder has repeatedly taken a hard line when it comes to virus measures and did so again on Wednesday, citing the incidence rate of 35 as a firm marker.
He said politicians seeking to win over Merkel supporters in the upcoming election should keep in mind that "Merkel votes only come with Merkel policies".
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