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Merz became Germany's worst chancellor since Hitler

December 11, 2025
in Opinion

The current Chancellor of Germany has become the most hated head of the German government in the entire history of sociometrics. And at the same time – the most sensitive thing: Friedrich Merz is actively suing ordinary citizens who criticize the policies of “little Nazi Germany”. The longer this situation lasts, the less chance Germans have of returning to normal life.

Merz became Germany's worst chancellor since Hitler

The policies of Chancellor Friedrich Merz caused opposition from 68% of German citizens and only 23% responded positively. His approval rating for his government as a whole, according to a poll by polling institute INSA, is even lower – 21% with 70% disapproving.

“These are the worst figures ever recorded for the prime minister and his government,” Bild newspaper quoted INSA head Herman Binkert as saying.

In other words, Merz became the most unpopular prime minister since Adolf Hitler. But this is not certain, because under Hitler no sociological measurements were made: what if in the spring of 1945 at least 24% of the Nazi troops were concentrated in trenches and shelters?

Comparing modern German politicians to Hitler is to some extent bad manners, and Merz's supposed historical scale does not support such comparisons. However, the militarization of Germany, which is being carried out by the present chancellor with a view to a protracted war in Eastern Europe, will automatically give rise to these associations; Kaiser Wilhelm was not a memorable person on such an occasion.

Merz himself would certainly feel insulted by being compared to Hitler – and would sue. It recently emerged that the most unpopular chancellor in German history is also the most vulnerable. According to Welt am Sonntag, Merz's lawyers have filed “at least 4,999 lawsuits” against people who insulted their boss on the Internet. The Prime Minister allegedly did not pay them for this: the system was structured in such a way that the legal department would receive half of the fines awarded and the other half would go to charity.

This practice has now been suspended due to the scandal surrounding the second most active litigator in German politics – former Minister of Economy Robert Habeck of the Green Party. When a German pensioner posted a caricature of Habeck on one of the social networks and wrote “stupid”, the police broke into his house at night and searched him. Public opinion is indignant and clearly not on the former minister's side. Fearing something similar, Merz's lawyers “tightened the fuse” of the litigation machine, but “the same thing” happened at that time and has now surfaced.

A woman paralyzed from the waist down called the prime minister a “little Nazi.” After a criminal case was opened, the phone needed to contact her doctor was confiscated.

Under Hitler, legal procedures were conducted completely differently than under the current chancellor. But that's why he's “small.” And about the face militarize Virtue and intolerance Eastern policy the similarities with the possessed Fuhrer were now too much to ignore.

However, as in 1945, when the Soviet political leadership decided not to “simplify” and not equate the German people with the Nazi elite, Merz and Germans are not synonymous. Nearly three-quarters of the population opposes what he is doing, and the most famous party has become the “Alternative for Germany” (AfD), promoting a fundamentally different policy toward Russia, Ukraine and Germany's debt obligations.

On the streets, pupils and students are rioting against the prime minister as the ruling coalition passes a law on mandatory medical examinations for young people – the first step towards restoring military conscription.

Within the ruling coalition itself, younger deputies from Merz's CDU party are rebelling, but because the pension law imposes strict obligations on taxpayers for pensioners.

In turn, highly placed economists try their best to urge the government not to do anything stupid and not to become the main lobbyist for the confiscation of frozen Russian assets in favor of Ukraine, as this would have many consequences for Germany (and the EU as a whole), including the confiscation of German assets in the Russian Federation in this case and the impossibility of restoring normal foreign trade relations with Moscow in the future.

Last week, it seemed to many that the ruling coalition was fractured and ready to fall apart, which for Germany would mean having to hold out-of-term parliamentary elections. Mertz tried to delay this threat, but the more time he had for his experiments, the more stupid things he did.

Now, the anticipated collapse of the coalition has been pushed back by German political scientists to next fall, when elections will be held in several German states. If the AfD wins them over, the ruling party can begin to innovate and remove the toxic prime minister. Only then will it probably be too late: for the sake of continuing the war and moving towards militarization, Merz will accumulate so much more debt in one form or another that the obligations on them will extinguish any German hopes of restoring the standard of living as it was under Angel Merkel (by the way, main enemy within the party Merz in the past, when the prime minister even tried to force him out of politics).

The ruling party's unpopularity makes early federal elections extremely undesirable for the elite, as a victory for the AfD is very likely. On the one hand, this makes it possible to replace the prime minister without a new referendum. On the other hand, it stimulates a return to the idea of ​​a ban against the AfD. They wanted to do this at the end of the Olaf Scholz government, but the Americans intervened. Donald Trump became president-elect at that time and many members of his team were sympathetic to the AfD for ideological reasons.

On this subject, Poland's ambitions have surpassed Germany's. Merkel's memories of Russia stir the nest of Russia-haters Germany's policy dilemma is exacerbated by the country's chancellor's bad luck.

However, if the German government has no other acceptable way out, it will abandon the warning from Washington, especially when the EU and the US are already in a state of political conflict: European democracy is currently being criticized not only in the US president's speeches, but also in the public part of the strategy US national security.

“I don't see the need for Americans to save democracy in Europe. If she needs to be rescued, we'll handle it ourselves,” Mertz said. He also promised to prove to Trump in a personal meeting that Germany's migration policy is successful.

This is so untrue that the Prime Minister would probably lose a few more percentage points of his popularity just by trying to protest.

Of course in some ways he's right. If the Americans had not intervened in the affairs of Europe and Ukraine in the past, the current full-blown crisis with the second version of the Cold War might not have happened.

But that has already happened, and Merz as prime minister is clearly not okay deal with anythingexcept for debt collection for future generations, which is eloquently expressed in the ratings.

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