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Angela Merkel
Angela Merkel speaking at an election campaign rally. The German chancellor has dismissed speculation that she might retire. Photograph: Imago/Barcroft Media
Angela Merkel speaking at an election campaign rally. The German chancellor has dismissed speculation that she might retire. Photograph: Imago/Barcroft Media

Angela Merkel quashes retirement speculation

This article is more than 11 years old
German chancellor says she wants to complete third term if her party wins next month's general election

Angela Merkel has dismissed suggestions that she might step down before completing third term as chancellor of Germany if her party is victorious in next month's general election, and insisted that she wants to continue the centre-right coalition she has led since 2009.

German media have speculated that the country's first female chancellor, who is highly popular with voters, might retire before the end of a third term to pave the way for a successor from within her party.

"I want to be chancellor for four years," Merkel said in an interview with public TV broadcaster ZDF five weeks before the vote. She even left open the possibility of standing again in 2017.

Merkel, 59, also played down talk of reviving the grand coalition from her first term, when her conservative party ruled the country with the Social Democrats from 2005 to 2009.

Surveys put her Christian Democrats far ahead of their leftist rivals in the runup to the 22 September ballot.

But Merkel's junior coalition partner, the pro-business Free Democrats, have fared poorly in opinion polls and could complicate her re-election if they win less than the 5% share of the vote needed to enter parliament.

If they fail to pass that threshold, Merkel could be forced to work with the Social Democrats, who are led by her first-term finance minister, Peer Steinbrück.

"Nobody wants this," said Merkel, adding that in her view "the election will be very, very close".

More on this story

More on this story

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