A special parliamentary assembly meets Sunday to elect president for the next five years. , who has been endorsed by most mainstream political parties, is seeking a second term as the largely ceremonial head of state.
The president will be elected by a special assembly of 736 people made up of the members of parliament’s lower house and representatives of ³Ò±ð°ù³¾²¹²Ô²â’s 16 states. The Social Democrats, the Greens and the pro-business Free Democrats — the three parties in s governing coalition — are expected to have a majority in the assembly.
³Ò±ð°ù³¾²¹²Ô²â’s biggest opposition party — the Christian Democratic Union and its Bavarian sister party, the Christian Social Union — also said that it will support Steinmeier’s reelection, leaving the head of state well-placed to win another five years in office.
Steinmeier, 66, announced that he would seek a second term last May, before the parliamentary election that brought Scholz’s coalition to power and at a time when his chances of re-election looked far from certain. The president said he wanted to help heal divisions widened by the
Before becoming president, Steinmeier served two stints as Chancellor Angela Merkel’s foreign minister and previously was chief of staff to Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder.
³Ò±ð°ù³¾²¹²Ô²â’s president has little executive power but is considered an important moral authority. After a messy parliamentary election result in 2017, Steinmeier helped prod politicians to form a rather than holding out for a new vote.
Other than Steinmeier, three other candidates are running for Germany's highest office though none of them has a serious chance of winning.
Gerhard Trabert, 65, a physician, is running for the Left Party, Stefanie Gebauer, 41, was nominated by the Free Voters party, and Max Otte, 57, is the candidate of far-right Alternative for Germany party even though he is a member of the CDU — a fact that prompted his own party to call for him to leave or face possible expulsion.