Germany: 2025 elections at a glance- five candidates for German chancellor post

German voters decide on 23 February who will run their next government, with Friedrich Merz’s conservative Christian Democrats favourite to become the biggest party in power.

Controlling immigration and reviving the European Union’s biggest economy are the main issues in this snap election, triggered by the collapse of centre-left Chancellor Olaf Scholz’s coalition late last year.

We assess who and what you need to know ahead of the vote for Germany’s next parliament, the Bundestag.

Europe’s biggest economy has contracted for two years in a row, hit by high energy prices and stiff Chinese competition. The next government will need to turn that around and revive German industry.

A series of deadly attacks has heightened pressure on the mainstream parties to reform immigration and asylum rules, and boosted support for the far-right Alternative for Germany. Attacks in Mannheim, Solingen, Magdeburg and Aschaffenburg are all in fresh in German minds.

Although no other party is prepared to let Alternative for Germany (AfD) into government, if they come second and attract 20% of the vote, they could double their number of seats in the Bundestag.

Germans aged 18 and over will decide on their next parliament from 08:00-18:00 on 23 February.

There are five candidates for chancellor.

If the biggest party can secure a coalition deal with one or two other parties, the president will usually nominate its leader as chancellor. Then parliament will hold a secret ballot to decide.

The frontrunner in the race to run Germany is Friedrich Merz, whose Christian Democrats (CDU) are up to 10 points ahead in the polls. He was chosen as candidate for chancellor ahead of Markus Söder, the leader of their sister party in Bavaria the Christian Social Union.

Aged 69 and 198cm (6ft 6in) in height, Merz is a plain-talking, pro-business, social conservative who has spent years waiting in the wings.

Eclipsed in the CDU by Angela Merkel in 2002, he eventually left politics, served on the boards of investment banks and took up flying as an amateur pilot.

Merz’s first two bids to win the CDU leadership failed, against Merkel in 2018 and then Armin Laschet who went on to lose the German election in 2021.

Merz then took over the CDU and is running under the slogan “A Germany we can be proud of again”.

He has promised to restrict immigration, cut taxes and slash €50bn in welfare spending in a bid to kickstart Germany’s faltering economy. He has also promised to bolster aid for Ukraine.

But he provoked a furious backlash ahead of the election when he sought to tighten immigration rules by relying on the votes of the far-right AfD, and ultimately failed.

Former CDU chancellor Angela Merkel said he was “wrong” to accept AfD votes and he has faced big protests. But he has won the backing of his party and succeeded in putting the years of his more centrist rival behind him.

Olaf Scholz has already served more than three years as chancellor, at the head of an unpopular coalition that fell apart in a row over loosening Germany’s strict debt rules.

His government struggled from the start, largely because of the effect of Russia’s full-scale war in Ukraine on Germany’s economy.

Germany became Ukraine’s biggest aid-provider in Europe. Scholz spoke of a Zeitenwende (turning point) in beefing up German defence policy and military spending – but he was accused of acting too slowly or too late.

Many in his own Social Democrat party (SPD) believed he should have allowed party colleague Boris Pistorius to run for chancellor instead.

However, the party has joined conservatives in the past and although Scholz said he could no longer trust Merz, the Social Democrats remain potential partners.

Alice Weidel, 46, is the AfD first candidate for chancellor since the party was created in 2013.

She has little chance of winning power, but she has become popular with young voters on TikTok and her party has set its sights on four years’ time.

Co-led by Tino Chrupalla, the AfD has already secured one recent victory, in September’s state election in Thuringia in the east.

Weidel enjoys the support of Elon Musk, who said the ex-Goldman Sachs analyst could not be right wing extremist as she “has a same-sex partner from Sri Lanka”.

And yet she has backed the mass deportation of migrants, embracing the highly controversial term “remigration”, and she wants to end sanctions on Russia.

Party supporters have cheered her with the slogan Alice für Deutschland (Alice for Germany), which sounds similar to a banned Nazi slogan Alles für Deutschland.

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