Angela Merkel gets the message: she needs Wolfgang Schäuble

The German chancellor has never been more dependent on the flinty finance minister

German chancellor Angela Merkel and German finance minister Wolfgang Schauble during a special session of the German Bundestag over the proposed bailout package for Greece, in Berlin, Germany, yesterday. Photograph: Bernd von Jutrczenka/EPA

For her 61st birthday yesterday, Angela Merkel received two presents in the Bundestag. The first – welcome but unnecessary – was a bunch of flowers. The second – unwelcome but necessary – was a green light from deputies to join negotiations for a third bailout package for Greece.

If this was House of Cards, the birthday girl would been given a third gift: a knife in the back from her long-serving finance minister.

But nothing nasty like that ever happens in the Bundestag. Instead, Germany’s flinty finance minister Wolfgang Schäuble reminded the chancellor that she has never been more politically dependent on him.

Throughout the Greek crisis, Merkel has counted on Schäuble (72) to negotiate tough EU-IMF bailout deals, and then sell them at home to increasingly sceptical MPs and voters. Since last weekend’s endurance test in Brussels, however, cracks have appeared in Berlin’s most fascinating political relationship.

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Crown prince

Schäuble was once Helmut Kohl’s crown prince and, in 1998, his successor as leader of the

Christian Democratic Union

(CDU) until the party became ensnared in an illegal donations scandal.

Spotting her chance, Merkel, then Schäuble’s No 2, knifed him and Kohl, her mentor, to snatch the party leadership in 2000. When she assumed office five years later, she invited her former boss to serve in her cabinet.

As finance minister since 2009, Schäuble has become the most influential bailout negotiator in the eurogroup of finance ministers – and one of the most loathed men in Europe. But not so in Germany.

When Merkel thanked Schäuble yesterday for his “hours and endless hours” of Brussels bailout talks, deputies gave him – not her – sustained, enthusiastic applause.

It was a sign of the deep- rooted respect Schäuble enjoys on the CDU backbenches – far deeper than Merkel – and an indication that his proposal for a Greek “time-out” from the euro had not damaged his standing in Berlin in any way.

Greek future

Schäuble flagged the prospect once again in a curious radio interview on Thursday. Conceding what the dogs in Berlin’s government have known for months, he said he doesn’t believe Greece has a future in the euro zone, at least not if it wants to restructure an unsustainable debt burden.

Critics around Europe have decried his “time-out”proposal as a dagger to the heart of the currency union and European integration.

Schäuble disagrees. Two decades after he devised the concept of a two-speed Europe in a 1994 paper, he believes that keeping Greece on board, whatever the cost, is a sure-fire way to a no-speed Europe.

However, loyal minister that he is, he left those concerns at the Bundestag door yesterday when, in a nod to Greek leader Alexis Tsipras, he made the case for the third programme in which he doesn't believe.

Senior coalition figures say Schäuble has been “agitating” against further aid for Greece with CDU backbenchers for some time, even if he kept his personal doubts to himself in the Bundestag yesterday.

He reminded deputies that, should talks on a third Greek bailout end in a deal, they will have another chance to vote on it – and, he implied, on Merkel’s euro crisis strategy.

Which raises the tantalising question: who would government deputies listen to more if the chancellor’s disagreement with her finance minister on Greece escalates?

Some 16 years after she humiliated him, Schäuble has quietly reminded Angela Merkel that, in a parting shot, he could yet return the favour.

Derek Scally

Derek Scally

Derek Scally is an Irish Times journalist based in Berlin