Centre Party rules out backing Kristersson: German CSU and FDP face leadership crises
Centre Party leader rules out backing Kristersson for Swedish premiership as CSU reforms and FDP leadership shift dominate German politics.
Elisabeth Thand Ringqvist, leader of Sweden’s Centre Party (C), declares support for Moderates (M) leader Ulf Kristersson as prime minister "highly unrealistic" due to his party’s shrinking poll numbers, effectively closing the door on a centre-right coalition after the next election. In an interview with Swedish Radio’s *Ekot*, Thand Ringqvist cites current polling, which shows the Moderates trailing significantly, as the decisive factor .
Meanwhile, Germany’s Christian Social Union (CSU) faces internal pressure for reform as Manfred Weber, the party’s deputy chair and European Parliament president, publicly rejects ambitions for the CSU leadership but demands a bold realignment. Weber praises Chancellor Friedrich Merz’s "strong position" in EU politics while calling for "courage and heart" to modernise the party, a signal of growing unease over its electoral decline .
The Free Democratic Party (FDP) completes its leadership transition this weekend, with 74-year-old Wolfgang Kubicki set to be confirmed as party chair at a Berlin congress. The veteran politician, known for his polarising style, inherits a party in crisis after its 2025 Bundestag election collapse. Outgoing leader Christian Dürr pledged "full support" for Kubicki during a farewell ceremony met with standing applause, while North Rhine-Westphalia’s Minister-President Hendrik Wüst reaffirmed backing for Merz’s chancellorship .
Kubicki’s leadership faces immediate scepticism, particularly among the FDP’s youth wing, which questions his appeal to younger voters. Critics argue his traditionalist approach clashes with the party’s need to reconnect with a generation raised on social media, not talk shows . Analysts suggest his success hinges on repositioning the FDP as a centrist alternative, a task complicated by the party’s post-liberal identity crisis .
The developments reflect broader turbulence in Europe’s centre-right and liberal parties, with Sweden’s coalition arithmetic in flux and Germany’s FDP fighting for survival. The CSU’s reform debate, meanwhile, underscores tensions between Merz’s national leadership and the party’s Bavarian base, where calls for renewal grow louder ahead of regional elections next year.
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