Search This Blog

Friday, May 27, 2022

The Chancellor by Kati Marton

Regardless of how you feel about her politics, Angela Merkel is a remarkable woman. Her marathon tenure as Germany’s leader has officially crossed the finish line, but her final lap of honor will take some time. There are quantifiable historic firsts: 16 years in office make her the joint longest-serving chancellor of the postwar era and she’s the first German chancellor to have the wisdom to step down of her own will, at the end of a full term. he’s the first female German head of government, the first with a scientist’s training, and the first to have grown up in a socialist command economy. She may go down in history as a once-in-a-century political adaptor, connecting two differently hardwired systems kept apart by the Berlin Wall. Yet it’s also possible that Merkel may not be remembered as a pioneer, but as the last example of an idea that feels increasingly old-fashioned in an age where more and more political tribes are built around personal identity: leadership as an exercise in ego suppression, holding high office as tantamount to covering the very traits that make you unique. I was in awe of her by the end of the book, and hope that we see many more like her, though that seems hopelessly optimistic at this very moment.

No comments:

Post a Comment