- cross-posted to:
- world@lemmy.world
- cross-posted to:
- world@lemmy.world
When Friedrich Merz became Germany’s chancellor this year, he promised to revive a moribund economy, rebuild the nation’s neglected infrastructure and making the country relevant on the global stage again. His failure to deliver on many of these core issues has not only helped energize far-right parties like the Alternative for Germany
Merz also caused confusion at an October meeting of European Union leaders, when he incorrectly reported a trade agreement with the Mercosur bloc had been concluded. He later brushed off the mistake as a minor issue.


Germany: votes for idiots promising nazi-lite ideas
Also Germany: pikachu face that things aren’t getting better
Question from a non Germany: how does a chancellor get elected? From what I know, the citizen don’t directly vote for them.
We vote for members of parliament who then elect the chancellor by majority vote.
So yes, the chancellor is not directly elected. This method ensures the chancellor always has a majority in parliament this avoiding periods of deadlock. Also keep in mind that the chancellor is not nearly as powerful as the president in most presidential systems.
Thanks for the explanation!
Monti Python Meme: You are the chancellor? Well, I didn’t vote for you!
You’re foolin’ yourself!