The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. 2001-07.
Merkel, Angela
(än´glä mär´kl) (KEY) , 1954, German politician, b. Hamburg as Angela Dorothea Kasner. The daughter of a Lutheran pastor, she grew up in what was then East Germany. She trained as a physicist (Ph.D., Univ. of Leipzig, 1978) and worked (197890) as a quantum chemistry researcher at East Berlins Academy of Sciences. Involved in the 1989 democracy movement, she joined the conservative Christian Democratic Union (CDU) and was elected to parliament in 1990. A protégé of Chancellor Helmut Kohl, she served under him as minister for youth and women (199194) and the environment (199498). After Kohls defeat in 1998, Merkel became CDU secretary-general and, having distanced herself from her former mentor, she was named party leader in 2000. In the 2005 elections she led the CDU coalition to a narrow victory over the Social Democrats. No party, however, secured a workable plurality of seats, forcing the CDU into coalition with the Social Democrats. Merkel became chancellor, the first woman and the first E German after unification to do so. Within the EU and internationally she has worked to win agreement on measures that would reduce greenhouse gas emissions.