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The German presidency
is little more than a symbolic position, nonetheless, the announcement by
German President Christian Wulff that he will
resign is a major embarrassment to German Chancellor Angela Merkel who
hand-picked Wulff as president.
Spiegel Online reports Wulff Announces He Will Step Down
German President
Christian Wulff resigned from office after
prosecutors stated a day earlier they would seek to have parliament lift his
immunity. Prosecutors wanted his immunity revoked so they could formally
investigate allegations he accepted favors during his tenure as governor of
the state of Lower Saxony. At the center of the probe are allegations that a
film producer had paid for a vacation in a luxury hotel for Wulff during his time in office in the state.
Speaking nearly a half hour after Wulff's
resignation, German Chancellor Angela Merkel appeared before reporters to say
she had received Wulff's resignation with
"great respect and deep regret." The chancellor also noted that the
development underscored the strength of the German legal system because it
showed that all people are treated equally, regardless of their position.
Merkel said her coalition government would approach all political parties in
an effort to find a "joint candidate" to replace Wulff.
The development is likely to cause embarrassment because Wulff
is the second president after Horst Köhler to
step down during her term. The chancellor handpicked Wulff
to run as Köhler's successor after his sudden
resignation in 2010. Even after his selection, Wulff
was weakened going into the presidency because it took three rounds of voting
in the Federal Assembly before he was ultimately elected.
Financial Times reports that Merkel cancelled a
meeting scheduled with prime minister Mario Monti
in Rome on Friday in the wake of the announcement by Wulff.
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