A wave of high-profile reshuffles among the German coalition parties has all but kicked off the 2025 national election campaign. Prepare for a year of German introspection and Europe on pause. A prominent EU lawmaker once told me the relationship between European officials and Brussels correspondents feels like a Stockholm syndrome community of people caring about an unpopular cause. If we take up this health-related metaphor, then covering EU politics from a European capital, as I do, sometimes feels like being on life support. Reporting on the fringe of a fringe topic often means rehashing the news that national media uncover and pump through their channels while breathlessly holding out for the smallest glimmer of an EU scoop. The German national election, scheduled for 28 September 2025, is the pinnacle of that existence. With the country entering a period of intense introspection, reporting focuses on national news and translating Germany’s political oddities. The latest political bombshell in Berlin was a painful reminder that election time – and thus, translating time – finally came to us: On Monday, Kevin Kühnert, the general secretary of the Social Democratic party of Chancellor Olaf Scholz, resigned. Anyone versed in Berlin’s political vocabulary quickly grasped the significance of this announcement, as was demonstrated by subsequent breaking news notifications. Anyone in Brussels might rightly wonder: Kevin, who? General what? |