The politician has claimed that his Social Democratic Party is “united’ and “determined” to enter the next election “together”.
Germany’s chancellor, Olaf Scholz, has announced his plans to run for the government’s top post again in 2025. He also dismissed his party’s poor election results as a “stimulus” to do better during a two-hour media conference in Berlin.
Scholz’s Social Democratic Party (SPD) suffered its worst nationwide election result in European Parliament elections in early June, where it got just under 14% of the votes. The party’s rating also stands at around 14%, according to ARD Deutschlandtrend survey results published in early July.
Schools claimed his party is “determined to go into the next federal election campaign together and to win.” He admitted that while poll results were “not good” his party would be able to show that the SPD-led government made the right decisions during its tenure and would “succeed in convincing everyone of this.”
When asked whether he himself would follow the footsteps of US President Joe Biden, who recently abandoned his 2024 re-election bid, Scholz maintained he was still determined to run and win in 2025.
“I will run for chancellor to become the chancellor again,” he said. Under the German election system, a party that gets most votes at the federal parliamentary election normally gets a chance to form a government, usually in a coalition with other parties. Scholz’s Social Democrats lead the present coalition which also includes the Greens and the Free Democratic Party.
Most major parties also usually name their chancellor candidates ahead of the vote as part of their election campaign.
Scholz insisted his party is “very united.” Recent poll results published by the German media paint another picture. According to a survey conducted in early July, only a third of SPD members believe Scholz should run again as the party’s candidate for chancellor, with 67% saying that a different candidate would improve the party’s chances in the upcoming elections.
A third of party members named Defense Minister Boris Pistorius as a suitable candidate for leadership. More than a half of the SPD members (51%) believe the party is in a serious crisis, according to a Forsa Institute on behalf of the RND media outlet. Still, as many as 55% of SPD members also stated they were either “satisfied” or “very satisfied” with Scholz. The poll was conducted between July 8 and July 12 and involved 1,001 SPD members.
Data presented by the German private online statistics aggregator, Statista, showed that Scholz’s popular support has hit one of its lowest points since early 2022, with only 28% of Germans assessing his work as a chancellor positively and 67% viewing it negatively in June.
Nothing to fear when you already know the election will be rigged in your favour 🤷🏼♂️
Europe is an Orwell novel at this point.
Make Germany great again
Qualifications include ‘blowing up pipelines’