Via Billy
Alexander
Gauland, parliamentary group leader of the far-right AfD (Alternative
for Germany) party, says Chancellor Angela Merkel's struggle to form a
new government shows "her time is up"
With Germany in crisis, Europe-watchers contemplate an E.U. after Merkel
Germany has for decades been Europe's pillar of stability, supporting
the European Union through economic crises, pressures from immigration
and the threat of a resurgent far-right.
But with
Germany's politics now in disarray —
and the future of its chancellor Angela Merkel hanging in the balance —
Europe risks losing its de facto leader, resulting in a power vacuum
across the continent.
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Angela Merkel and Davos rebuked in Germany
It’s been a tough era for Davos Man, the personification of the great
and the good who meet in the World Economic Forum in that Swiss ski
resort every January. The rebukes just keep coming: the Euro crisis,
Brexit, Trump, and now, and once again unexpectedly, Angela Merkel’s
failure to form a German government.
For a dozen years, European elites who have recoiled from former
President George W. Bush and swooned over former President Barack Obama
have regarded Merkel as a rock-solid firmament of good sense. Her
considerable internal political skills, her seeming unflappability, her
upholding of conventional wisdoms, both well- and ill-founded, have made
her a favorite at Davos.
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German far-right relishes its power as Merkel struggles
The far-right Alternative for Germany party sees Chancellor Angela
Merkel's struggle to form a new government as proof of its growing power
to upend the country's political order, a top party official told AFP.
Parliamentary
group leader Alexander Gauland said in an interview that the current
turmoil showed that the four-year-old AfD had succeeded in its primary
goal in September's general election.