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Maendeleo Vijijini
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German Chancellor Angela Merkel was expected to announce her bid
for re-election Sunday in a move likely to be welcomed in many capitals
as a sign of stability following shock poll triumphs for Brexit and
Donald Trump.
After months of feverish speculation
about her plans, Merkel is due to hold a news conference at 1800 GMT
during a meeting of her conservative Christian Democrats (CDU) and say
she will seek a fourth term in the 2017 elections.
Merkel, 62, has governed Europe's top economic power, which does not have term limits, since 2005.
Another
full four-year term, which pollsters say is likely, would tie the
post-war record set by her mentor Helmut Kohl, who presided over the
1989 fall of the Berlin Wall.
The head of the German
Council on Foreign Relations, Daniela Schwarzer, said Merkel's sense of
duty had likely shaped her decision.
"Observing the
potential repercussions of Trump's election victory on Europe, I think
that the task is even bigger now than it was before the American
election and so I would think that she might feel that the job isn't
quite done," she told AFP.
"There's a need to continue leading Europe."
BACK INTO HER ARMS
Merkel,
a pastor's daughter who grew up in communist East Germany, is popular
among Germans, who see her as a straight-shooter and a safe pair of
hands in tumultuous times.
But her decision to let in more than one million asylum seekers over the last two years has dented her support.
It
also revived the fortunes of the right-wing populist Alternative for
Germany party (AfD), which has harnessed widespread anxiety about
migration.
However observers said the recent seismic
shifts in global politics could drive traditionally risk-adverse German
voters back into her arms.
"The society's need for
predictability and stability could become so overpowering in the 2017
election year that even the creeping erosion of Merkel's chancellorship
won't compromise her success at the polls in the end," news weekly Die
Zeit said.
As US President Barack Obama exits the
stage, many observers say Merkel's importance as a defender of Western
values will only continue to grow, with some calling her the new "leader
of the free world".
While the globe braces for
potentially radical changes in US leadership under Trump, Britain is
wrestling with the fallout from its June vote backing withdrawal from
the EU and France is facing polls in May that could see far-right
candidate Marine Le Pen snatch victory.
In a further
sign of her relative strength, Merkel gathered Obama and the leaders of
Britain, France, Spain and Italy at her chancellery Friday for talks on
the fight against terrorism, climate change and the strategic threat
posed by Russia.
OBAMA ENDORSEMENT
Merkel
has long refused to be drawn on her plans for the general election,
expected in September or October 2017, saying only that she would make
the announcement "at the appropriate time".
She
repeated the line with a smile at a bittersweet farewell news conference
in Berlin Thursday with Obama, who praised her as an "outstanding
partner" and urged Germans to "appreciate" her.
"It's
up to her whether she wants to stand again... but if I were here and I
were German and I had a vote, I might support her," he said.
Misgivings
about Merkel's refugee policy were blamed for a string of state
election defeats for the CDU over the last 18 months, and sparked an
open revolt by its Bavarian sister party, the CSU, which demanded a
strict upper limit on incoming asylum-seekers.
A poll
released Friday showed that Merkel's conservatives would draw 32 percent
of the vote if the election were held this weekend, down 10 points from
the last national election in 2013.
The Social
Democrats (SPD), junior partners in Merkel's right-left ruling
coalition, were a distant second with 23 percent, followed by the
opposition Greens with 13 percent.
The AfD scored 12 percent, according to independent opinion research institute Infratest dimap.
It
is still unclear who will carry the SPD's banner into the race, with
party leader Sigmar Gabriel potentially facing a challenge from European
Parliament President Martin Schulz.
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