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Viewing cable 10DUSSELDORF14, NRW Election Chess Game II: Ruettgers Castles His Rook

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Reference ID Created Released Classification Origin
10DUSSELDORF14 2010-02-24 17:02 2011-08-24 01:00 UNCLASSIFIED//FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY Consulate Dusseldorf
VZCZCXRO2281
RR RUEHAG RUEHAST RUEHDA RUEHDBU RUEHFL RUEHIK RUEHKW RUEHLA RUEHLN
RUEHLZ RUEHNP RUEHPOD RUEHROV RUEHSK RUEHSL RUEHSR RUEHVK RUEHYG
DE RUEHDF #0014/01 0551704
ZNR UUUUU ZZH
R 241702Z FEB 10
FM AMCONSUL DUSSELDORF
TO RUEHC/SECSTATE WASHDC 0004
INFO EUROPEAN POLITICAL COLLECTIVE
FRG COLLECTIVE
UNCLAS SECTION 01 OF 02 DUSSELDORF 000014 
 
SENSITIVE 
SIPDIS 
 
E.O. 12958: N/A 
TAGS: PGOV GM
SUBJECT: NRW Election Chess Game II: Ruettgers Castles His Rook 
 
REF: DUSSELDORF 12 
 
1.  (U) Summary:  North Rhine-Westphalia (NRW) Minister-President 
(M-P) Juergen Ruettgers, tried to quickly mend political damage 
from his party's financing scandal by announcing February 23 his 
close advisor Andreas Krautscheid as the new NRW Christian 
Democratic Union (CDU) Secretary-General, the chief organizer of 
his re-election campaign.  Ruettgers' speed in naming a replacement 
for Hendrik Wuest, who took the hit and stepped down February 22 
(see reftel), indicates recognition of the increasingly serious 
situation that he and the party are in following the revelations of 
the past weekend.  The mood in the election campaign in NRW has 
shifted dramatically in just a few days, opening up the real 
possibility of a loss by the CDU- Free Democrats (FDP) governing 
coalition.  End Summary. 
 
 
 
Krautscheid Takes One for the Team 
 
-------------------------------------------- 
 
2.  (U) Ruettgers named Krautscheid to succeed Wuest following a 
financing scandal that has thrown the CDU's election campaign for 
the May 9 state parliament elections into disarray.  Krautscheid, a 
long-time close confidant of Ruettgers, will, in effect, take a 
leave of absence from his post as NRW Minister for European and 
Federal Affairs to take up the management of the CDU campaign.  He 
had been talked about as first in line to become the new floor 
leader of the CDU parliamentary group in the NRW state parliament 
after an assumed election victory.  His focus now becomes salvaging 
the CDU's chances of staying in power. 
 
 
 
3.  (U) Krautscheid (49) has had extensive political experience at 
both the state and national levels, as well as a seven-year stint 
as a senior manager in the private sector.  He started his 
political career at national CDU headquarters in Bonn, where he 
served as deputy national spokesman in the early 1990s before being 
elected to the Bundestag in 1994.  Although a freshman, he quickly 
made a name for himself as a combative debater in parliament and as 
a member of the so-called "pizza connection" in the Bundestag, a 
group of young CDU and Greens parliamentarians who regularly met 
informally to exchange views.  (Note: Other CDU members of this 
unusual group were Norbert Roettgen, now Federal Environmental 
Affairs Minister, Hermann Groehe, now national CDU 
Secretary-General, and Armin Laschet, now NRW Integration Minister. 
End note.)   After narrowly losing his re-election bid in the wake 
of Kohl's defeat in 1998, Krautscheid worked in the private sector, 
before Ruettgers made him NRW chief government spokesman in 2006 
and appointed him to his cabinet in 2007, where he quickly became 
one of Ruettgers' closest associates. (He just recently accompanied 
Ruettgers on his snowed under trip to the U.S.)  Groehe welcomed 
Krautscheid's new appointment, calling it a "wise decision," and 
terming him a "trump card in the election campaign." 
 
 
 
How Bad is the Damage? 
 
------------------------------ 
 
4.  (SBU) News of Krautscheid's new job spread quickly on Tuesday 
evening.  At an event in Duesseldorf, the CG talked with a senior 
official at the NRW State Chancellery, who confirmed that the mood 
around the M-P's office was severely affected by the four-day-old 
scandal.  He believed the M-P was unaware of the sale of 
appointments, but thought the M-P's proclaimed ignorance would not 
help with the voters.  This scandal, he said, has grabbed the 
public's attention to a degree others have not:  it boils down to 
the credibility of the state's top elected official, access, and 
money at a time of sustained economic hardship.  Our source also 
said that the public mood is turning against the M-P, noting that 
he listened to a radio call-in show that morning where callers were 
railing against the apparent fact that wealthy donors had easier 
access to Ruettgers than the average citizen.  Those around the M-P 
believe that if the CDU does not end up back in the government 
after the May election, this scandal would unquestionably be the 
event responsible for the loss. 
 
 
 
Comment 
 
------------- 
 
DUSSELDORF 00000014  002 OF 002 
 
 
5.  (SBU)  Comment:  The mood surrounding this upcoming election 
has changed quickly from one of presumed easy victory for the 
CDU-FDP coalition to one of the CDU in crisis, with the expectation 
that anything is now possible.  Ruettgers' pulling of Krautscheid 
from his cabinet duties to run the campaign represents the next 
move in the election chess game for the CDU, as the M-P tries to 
salvage his re-election chances by bring one of his closest, most 
experienced and media-savvy allies to the center of the game.  For 
her part NRW Social Democratic Party (SPD) leader Hannelore Kraft 
is keeping a low profile so far as she prepares for her party's 
election convention this weekend, letting the affair take its own 
course.  New polls on the election are expected towards the end of 
this week or early next week.  Important will be how the CDU and 
the FDP - now at about 6% -- fare.  If they show a dramatic drop, 
2-4% or so, for the CDU (currently hovering between 36-41% in the 
polls), the possibility for a change in the governing coalition in 
NRW becomes real.  The NRW elections are widely viewed as a litmus 
test for the national CDU-FDP coalition, which has gotten off to a 
rocky start with no real improvement in sight.  A loss of a CDU-FDP 
majority in NRW would mean not only a loss of a CDU-FDP majority in 
the Bundesrat, but would be seen as a political blow to the 
national coalition.  End comment. 
 
 
 
6.  (U) This message was coordinated with Embassy Berlin. 
WEINER