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    3. >Germany's equality chessboard creates headache in picking new government's ministers
    Headlines

    Germany's Equality Chessboard Creates Headache in Picking New Government's Ministers

    Published by Global Banking & Finance Review®

    Posted on April 10, 2025

    3 min read

    Last updated: January 24, 2026

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    Quick Summary

    Germany's new government faces challenges in selecting ministers, balancing regional representation and gender equality, with no women in top roles.

    Germany's Minister Selection Faces Equality Challenges

    BERLIN (Reuters) - Germany faces the conundrum of choosing ministers for its next government without flouting equality sensitivities: the main candidates are from only two regions, and none of the names circulating so far is a woman.

    Announcing the coalition deal between his conservatives and the Social Democrats this week, chancellor-in-waiting Friedrich Merz said that while the responsibilities and parties in charge of each ministry had been agreed, nothing would be finalised until the SPD has ratified the accord at the end of April.

    In Germany, a decentralised country with powerful regional party organisations in each of 16 federal states, it is hard to keep everyone happy. It's not for want of experienced hands.

    For example, the Christian Democrats have Jens Spahn, the health minister who steered Germany through the COVID-19 pandemic, and Armin Laschet, who was premier of a state larger than the Netherlands, or former party chief Carsten Linnemann.

    But all, like Merz, are from North Rhine-Westphalia, leaving too few slots for people from party branches in other states.

    The SPD has the same problem with Lower Saxony, home to Volkswagen and a party stronghold since former Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder ran it. Boris Pistorius, the popular defence minister, Hubertus Heil, the long-serving labour minister, and SPD leader Lars Klingbeil are all from there.

    Conspicuously absent from all lists leaked to the media so far is a woman in any of the most senior ministries - foreign affairs, finance, economics and interior. Olaf Scholz's outgoing government had women in two of the four posts.

    Backsliding on that would be a conspicuous failure, political analysts say, especially as the number of women in the newly elected parliament has also fallen, back down below a third of the assembly.

    For Merz, under scrutiny for remarks he has made about women in the past, the matter is delicate. Last year, he spoke against formal quotas in government. Scholz, the outgoing chancellor, insisted on parity between men and women.

    "We don't do women any favours if we do that (quotas)," Merz said, describing scenarios where a less capable woman was appointed purely because of her gender.

    "Who gets each ministry is decided not by the chancellor or the coalition, but each party on its own," said Kai Arzheimer, a professor at Mainz University. "And there, matters like the SPD's Lower Saxony connection can play a role."

    Other regional parties are also loath to see the Lower Saxony clique being rewarded after it led the SPD to its worst-ever result in the February 23 election.

    Ideally, some senior ministers would come from the former East Germany, a region that is still underrepresented 35 years after reunification.

    That matters all the more at a time when the far-right AfD party, which is anchored in eastern Germany, is leading in the country's polls for the first time since World War Two.

    (Reporting by Thomas Escritt; editing by Mark Heinrich)

    Key Takeaways

    • •Germany struggles with minister selection amid equality concerns.
    • •Main candidates are from two regions, lacking female representation.
    • •Chancellor-in-waiting Merz faces scrutiny over gender parity.
    • •SPD's regional dominance complicates ministerial appointments.
    • •Underrepresentation of East Germany remains a significant issue.

    Frequently Asked Questions about Germany's equality chessboard creates headache in picking new government's ministers

    1What is the main topic?

    The article discusses the challenges Germany faces in selecting ministers for its new government while maintaining regional and gender equality.

    2Why is gender parity a concern?

    No women are currently listed for senior ministries, which is seen as a step back from previous gender parity efforts.

    3What regions are overrepresented?

    Candidates are primarily from North Rhine-Westphalia and Lower Saxony, causing regional imbalance.

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