• 18 hours ago
Friedrich Merz is the frontrunner to become Germany’s next chancellor. At 69, he leads the CDU in a more conservative direction—marking a sharp shift from Angela Merkel’s legacy.
Merz’s CDU is now tougher on migration, focused on economic liberalization, and skeptical of the welfare state. But will voters back his vision?

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00:00Friedrich Merz is known for his discipline and strict leadership.
00:03He starts meetings on time, whether everyone's there or not,
00:06and expects the same work ethic from his team.
00:09At 69, he's the frontrunner to become Germany's next chancellor.
00:13A key figure in the CDU for decades,
00:16Merz has long been seen as Angela Merkel's opposite.
00:19Now, he's leading the party in a more conservative direction.
00:22His CDU plans to cut social benefits,
00:25including rolling back Bürgergeld, Germany's unemployment support.
00:29He argues those who can work should work.
00:32He also opposes recent citizenship reforms,
00:34saying German nationality should not be handed out lightly.
00:38With a background in corporate law and a past seat on BlackRock's board,
00:41Merz favors tax cuts and deregulation.
00:44He argues Germany needs economic growth, not more state intervention.
00:49But his wealth has raised eyebrows.
00:51He owns two private jets, which he pilots himself,
00:54yet describes himself as middle class.
00:57Critics say this makes him out of touch,
00:59though Merz insists his success is self-made.
01:03Merz's leadership marks a clear shift for the CDU —
01:06more conservative, more business-focused, and more hardline on migration.
01:13Will his vision win over German voters?

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