Wed, 07 May 2025
Macron welcomes Germany's new chancellor Merz to lyse Palace

The newly sworn-in German leader Friedrich Merz arrived in Paris on Wednesday, with plans to team up with ally France to boost European ties in turbulent times.Merz vowed on taking office Tuesday to be "a very European chancellor" and is headed later in the day to Poland. Watch his press conference with French President Emmanuel Macron live.

Germany's new ChancellorFriedrich MerzvisitedFranceon Wednesday, on a mission to boost ties with his European neighbours in turbulent times. He heads toPolandlater in the day.

Speaking alongside Merz at a joint press conference on Wednesday, French PresidentEmmanuel Macronannounced that France andGermanywill set up a jointdefencesecurity council that will meet regularly as part of their efforts to boost defence investments.

Merz is taking office asEuropescrambles to agree security guarantees forUkraineas part of anyceasefiredeal withRussiaand to negotiate a trade accord with the United States after PresidentDonald Trumpannounced sweeping tariffs.

On the need to supportUkraine, Merz said he would "consult intensively" with France and Britain, adding that "if we can include the Poles, then it will be even better".

Merz whose conservative CDU/CSUwon Germany's February electionsis a committed European, transatlanticist and Ukraine supporter who has vowed to restore Germany's role on the world stage after half a year of paralysis.

But the launch of hiscoalitiongovernment got off to a bad start when he failed to win an initial parliament vote, only securing the post in the second round.

For several tense hours, the drama threatened to prolong thepolitical crisisthat has hobbled Germany since the coalition of centre-left chancellor Olaf Scholz collapsed in November.

Claire Demesmay from Berlin's Centre Marc Bloch research institute told AFP that, Merz, who had previously been "in a position of strength ... has been weakened" already by not getting parliament support at the first time of asking.

However French PresidentEmmanuel Macronwas one of the first foreign leaders to congratulate Merz when he finally made it, saying he hoped they could "make the Franco-German motor stronger than ever".

"It is up to us to accelerate our European agenda for sovereignty, security and competitiveness. For the French, for the Germans and for all Europeans," he wrote on X.

United on Ukraine

A first visit to France is customary for German chancellors, but Merz has assigned it special importance.

He has underlined the need to jumpstart Franco-German ties at the core of the EU which was seen to have stalled under Scholz of the Social Democrats (SPD).

Merz said in January that, if elected, he would seek to "repair relations with our most important neighbours in Europe, Poland and France".

Merz is more open than Scholz to sending German long-range missiles to Ukraine, and of eventually deploying German troops as part of apeacekeepingforce if aceasefireis agreed.

Even before taking office, Merz's alliance achieved a softening of Germany's domestic debt brake to enable an investment "bazooka", much of it to boost Germany's armed forces.

On Tuesday Merz said his government's number one challenge would be to preserve "peace and freedom".

Ukrainian PresidentVolodymyr Zelenskywrote on X that "we sincerely hope that Germany will grow even stronger and that we'll see more German leadership in European and transatlantic affairs".

Merz later said that "President Zelensky knows he can rely on me and on Germany".

Shadow of WWII

In thecoalition contract betweenMerz's CDU/CSU alliance and the SPD, special emphasis is given to "strengthening friendship" with France and Poland.

The document says the three countries should "align closely on all relevant parts of European policy so that we can act in the most united way possible for the benefit of the whole EU".

In Merz's team, "the will to work closely with these two countries is clearly there", said Martin Koopmann, director of the Genshagen foundation.

But Koopmann also pointed to the complexities of the three-way relationship and the fact that Poland is not aeurozonemember.

Relations with Poland have been strained byquestions of historical responsibilityfor the crimes of Nazi Germany in the Second World War, which ended 80 years ago this week.

The nationalist Law and Justice (PiS) party, currently in opposition, has long demanded reparations from Berlin.

Less than two weeks before the first round of Poland'spresidential elections, Prime MinisterDonald Tuskwill have to tread carefully in dealing with Merz at the risk of accusations that he is too close toBerlin.

(FRANCE 24 with AFP)

Originally published on France24

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