Frederick Merz chose German Chancellor after the first round defeat

Frederick Merz was selected as the new Chancellor of Germany on Tuesday, who won the second round of the second round, just a few hours after their unprecedented failure in securing the majority in the first voting. His initial defeat was historic, the first marked in Germany after the war that a Chancellor candidate failed to win in the first round. Since the World War, the conservative leader was expected to win widely easily and become the 10th Chancellor of Germany.In the second round, Mars received 325 votes out of 630, which was sufficient to win a clear majority, while 289 voted against him.Despite the initial shock, analysts believed that Merze would become Chancellors. “Merz will most likely be the most likely to finally choose as Chancellor,” said Holgar Shamding of Berenberg Bank. “But still, the unprecedented failure of being selected in the first round will still be a bad start for him.”After the defeat of Merz in the first ballot, AFD co-leader Ellis Waidel said, “Merz should step on one side and clear the way for a general election, calling the unsuccessful vote” good day for Germany “.The 69-year-old conservative leader now works as an alliance between his CDU/CSU alliance and outgoing Chancellor Olaf Sholaz’s center-leftist social democrats (SPD).The European Union head Ursula von deer Leyen said that she would work with merz for a ‘strong’ Europe.Ukrainian President Zelansky congratulated the newly elected Chancellor and said he expects ‘more German leadership’ in the West under Merz.What if Merz lost?If Frederick Marse had lost the second round election for Chancellor, Bundestag (German Parliament) would have been 14 days to choose a candidate with an absolute majority. During this period, Merz could walk again, but other MPs could also put themselves forward. There is no limit to the number of votes to be held within these two weeks. If any candidate had not won a majority, the President of Germany may have appointed the candidate with the most votes or dissolved Bundestag, which led to a new national election.Merz’s biographical writer, Volkar Razing mentioned that if Mars won the second round, people forget the first round shock. However, remote AFD party co-leader Ellis Waidel criticized the merge failure, saying that it was shown that there was a “weak foundation” in his coalition. Despite the AFD’s strong performance in the February elections, he was excluded from the coalition negotiations due to a long-standing “firewall” against far-flung cooperation in German politics.