The head of Bavaria’s conservative party was on Saturday re-elected with his weakest score to date, seen as punishment after he berated ally German Chancellor Angela Merkel for her policy welcoming refugees.
Party delegates meeting in the southern city of Munich voted Horst Seehofer — who is also minister-president of Bavaria — back in to head the Christian Social Union (CSU) with 87.2 percent of the ballots.
It was his lowest score since 2008, when he took over leadership of the CSU, the powerful southern-based partner party of Merkel’s Christian Democratic Union (CDU).
Photo: EPA
When he was last re-elected two years ago, he won 95.3 percent of the vote. Seehofer on Friday criticized Merkel’s open-door policy as the chancellor stood on stage beside him at the Munich congress attended by about 1,000 CSU members.
“We want control and order, but we also want a limit — in the nation’s interest,” said Seehofer, whose state, which borders Austria, has become Germany’s main gateway for people fleeing wars in Syria, Iraq, Afghanistan and elsewhere.
“I can only tell you that we will be talking about this again, and I hope that we will come to an understanding,” Seehofer said before his party faithful, as a visibly uncomfortable Merkel stood beside him, staring at the floor.
Observers said some CSU delegates wanted to punish Seehofer for his comments, although Bavarian leaders have for weeks railed against Merkel’s open-door policy.
German news weekly Der Spiegel suggested that Seehofer’s comments did not go down well in some quarters.
“In the end, his criticism somewhat turned against him, because he spent minutes lecturing Merkel like a self-confident professor,” it wrote.
Visibly upset, Merkel left the CSU party congress without responding to Seehofer or the delegates.
In her speech minutes earlier at the congress, Merkel had again insisted that the top EU economy can and will shelter people in need and that “isolation and inaction are no solution in the 21st century.”
Since September, more than 500,000 migrants have entered the country through Bavaria. For Merkel, Germany’s refugee influx, predicted to reach 1 million people this year, has become the biggest challenge of her chancellorship as she marks 10 years in office this weekend.
Her decision to welcome Syrian refugees has won her plaudits, but also sparked a backlash, with some senior ministers openly questioning the approach and her usually stellar poll ratings slipping several points.
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