Bavarian leader reaffirms support for Laschet despite poll dip

Bavaria's State Premier and leader of the Bavarian Christian Social Union (CSU) Markus Soeder addresses guests during a CDU/CSU campaign rally for the general elections scheduled for September 26, 2021, at the Berliner Tempodrom in Berlin on August 21, 2021. (JOHN MACDOUGALL / AFP)

MUNICH – Bavarian premier Markus Soeder on Thursday rejected calls for him to replace Armin Laschet as conservative candidate to succeed Chancellor Angela Merkel in September's election, throwing his weight behind Laschet's ailing campaign.

Laschet, premier of Germany's most populous region, started the campaign with poll leads of as much as 25 percent, but missteps and voter doubts have whittled his lead away, with the Social Democrats (SPD) enjoying a narrow lead in some new polls.

Armin Laschet, premier of Germany's most populous region, started the campaign with poll leads of as much as 25 percent, but missteps and voter doubts have whittled his lead away, with the Social Democrats enjoying a narrow lead in some new polls

Soeder, leader of the smaller of the parties that make up Germany's conservative bloc, was Laschet's main rival for the conservative nomination and is the only politician with ratings to rival those of Finance Minister Olaf Scholz, the SPD candidate.

"He (Laschet) will be a strong chancellor," Scholz said in Munich, rejecting calls for the conservatives to revisit the choice. "He has my 100 percent support … The decision has been taken: We have a candidate, and he is called Armin Laschet."

ALSO READ: Germany's Social Democrats overtake Merkel's bloc in poll

Laschet, who was lambasted for blunders such as appearing to giggle in the background while the country's president paid tribute to over 200 victims of German floods, positioned himself as a centrist heir to Merkel but has failed to convince voters that he shares her trademark unflappability.

Soeder warned that the alternative to voting for Laschet could be a left-wing government that he said he was certain German voters did not want.

"I'm quite certain that German voters do not want a lurch to the left," he said.

The conservatives and the SPD were neck-and-neck at 23 percent in a Kantar poll published on Thursday, with the Greens in third place on 18 percent. A poll earlier this week put the SPD ahead for the first time in 15 years.

READ MORE: Merkel's bloc drops to record low ahead of German election

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