Chancellor Angela Merkel's successor at the helm of Germany's main center-right party sought to consolidate her power on Saturday after a narrow victory, installing a young conservative in a key leadership post in an effort to build bridges with her rivals.
Annegret Kramp-Karrenbauer, a Merkel ally close to her centrist stance, was elected as chairwoman of the Christian Democratic Union on Friday.
She narrowly defeated Friedrich Merz, a one-time Merkel rival representing a more traditionally conservative approach and a clearer break from the longtime chancellor's era. Another sometime Merkel critic, Health Minister Jens Spahn, was eliminated in earlier voting.
Kramp-Karrenbauer, 56, showed Saturday that she is keen to prevent lasting divisions and give conservatives and younger members a strong voice.
She nominated Paul Ziemiak, the 33-year-old leader of the party's youth wing, to serve as her general secretary the official in charge of day-to-day political strategy and the job she held herself until she was elected leader.
"This party is not split we all have the task of working on the unity of this party," she told a party congress in Hamburg.
Ziemiak, who ran unopposed, won the support of 62.8 per cent of delegates, a result suggesting Kramp-Karrenbauer still has plenty of work to do.
Ziemiak is further to the right than Kramp-Karrenbauer, is considered a friend of Spahn and comes from the same region as Merz.
Kramp-Karrenbauer, a Catholic who is herself a shade more conservative than Merkel on social and security issues, faces pressure to improve the CDU's electoral fortunes after a dismal year in which Merkel's uneasy governing coalition with the center-left Social Democrats lurched from one crisis to the next.
Four state elections loom next year, including three in the ex-communist east, where the anti-migration Alternative for Germany is strongest. That party's co-leader, Alice Weidel, described Kramp-Karrenbauer as "Merkel 2.0" and said that "the last conservative Christian Democrats have lost their battle."
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