Germany must pull itself together, Merz tells unions as jeers ring out
- Europe
- Reuters
- Published Date: 01:00 | 12 May 2026
- Modified Date: 01:04 | 12 May 2026
Chancellor Friedrich Merz said Germany must "pull itself together" or risk being left behind in a rapidly changing world, in a speech to trade unionists on Tuesday that sparked jeers, whistles and boos.
After a year in office, Merz's popularity has sunk and his government has become embroiled in disputes over how far and how fast to reform Europe's largest economy to revive growth and tackle ballooning healthcare and pension costs.
The sceptical reception among delegates representing workers from across industrial, public and service sectors reflects a wider battle in German politics over the pace of change at a time when established parties are losing votes to the surging far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD).
Merz's conservatives and their junior ally, the Social Democrats, were meeting later on Tuesday to thrash out differences, with Merz and his Vice Chancellor Lars Klingbeil batting away suggestions that the coalition could collapse.
After two years of recession, Germany returned to growth at the end of last year but the fragile recovery risks being snuffed out by an energy shock from the war with Iran and new U.S. tariffs targeting carmakers that are already struggling against competition from China.
"The challenges are also so great because we have created problems for ourselves for far too long, problems that we now have to solve. We have simply failed to modernise our country," Merz told the German Trade Union Confederation.
"Germany must therefore pull itself together. Germany must tackle the structural problems that we have been putting off for many years, problems that have consequently grown steadily larger. You know it, we all know it."
Merz said high costs and bureaucracy were hurting business, putting jobs and the prosperity of future generations at risk.
But his case for reforming health and pensions, the latter a straightforward question of "demographics and mathematics", was greeted with periodic heckling, whistles and laughter, while some in the audience held thumbs-down signs.