Europe is poised for a Super election Sunday on May 6th, with voters casting their ballots in both France and Greece. Then after the summer break the Netherlands will hold early elections, and Germany is due to vote next year. German Chancellor Angela Merkel's Europe policy is also on the table with each election, which prompts Bernd Ulrich, chief editor of the liberal weekly Die Zeit's politics section, to ponder on voting logic in Europe: "In view of their huge cross-border clout one could ask why German voters aren't allowed to join in a little in the Netherlands and France, with say a fifth of the vote. And conversely the French and Dutch could join in here. And then there's another oddity: Angela Merkel is the strong woman of Europe, yet Europeans probably wouldn't elect her as EU President. However if she was elected directly by the people in Germany, she would obtain a majority. But owing to the pressures of coalition politics that currently prevail in Germany, she may well lose her power despite all her popularity and the coincidences. In other words: ... Merkel leads a Europe that can't vote her out of office, yet she may accidentally be deprived of her power by the Germans, who don't actually want to vote her out of office. In terms of democratic legitimation this is all pretty messed up." (03/05/2012)
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