…
…
Business
Herz — Business Desk · · 30s summary · 3 min read
Jens Spahn, parliamentary group leader for the CDU/CSU at the German Bundestag, resigned on July 18, 2026, following explicit pressure from Chancellor Friedrich Merz. The crisis erupted on July 15, 2026, when Spahn and his husband Daniel Funke announced the birth of their son Georg, carried by a surrogate mother in the United States — a practice that is illegal in Germany and opposed by the CDU, a position Spahn himself had previously defended. Merz described the resignation as 'just and unavoidable.' Alexander Hoffmann (CSU) is serving as interim head of the group.
Jens Spahn resigned on July 18, 2026, as parliamentary group leader of the CDU/CSU at the German Bundestag — the body that coordinates the joint action of CDU and CSU parliamentarians in Germany's federal assembly. Chancellor Friedrich Merz had explicitly asked him to step down, according to Handelsblatt.
The crisis erupted three days earlier: on July 15, 2026, Spahn and his husband Daniel Funke announced the birth of their son Georg, carried by a surrogate mother in the United States.
Surrogacy is illegal in Germany. The CDU opposes legalizing it — a position Spahn had himself previously supported. This conflict between his personal conduct and his party's official line made his political position untenable.
In his letter to the group, Spahn wrote that his personal happiness at starting a family with his husband 'is not compatible with my political office.'
My family is what matters most.
— Jens Spahn, in his resignation letter to the CDU/CSU group
Merz described the resignation as 'just and unavoidable.'
Credibility is the most valuable asset in politics.
— Friedrich Merz, German Chancellor
Internal voices had anticipated the fall. As early as July 17, 2026, Daniel Peters, CDU leader of Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania, called for Spahn's resignation in the newspaper Bild. Local party branches, including those from Brilon (Merz's hometown) and the Rhine-Neckar district, followed suit.
Hendrik Wüst, Prime Minister of North Rhine-Westphalia, said he personally regretted the resignation while understanding it, calling it 'a great tragedy.'
Alexander Hoffmann, leader of the CSU parliamentary group at the Bundestag, is serving as interim head of the CDU/CSU group until an official successor is elected in a plenary session.
Thorsten Frei, currently head of the federal chancellery and former parliamentary affairs manager of the group when Merz was in opposition, is the leading candidate. If Frei moves to this position, Merz will also need to find a replacement for the chancellery.
No comments yet. Be the first to react.
No successor has been officially named. Internal consultations are expected before the group holds its plenary session, scheduled for September 8, 2026.
By using surrogacy in the United States, Spahn contradicted both German law and the CDU's official position, which he himself had previously defended. Chancellor Merz deemed his resignation unavoidable.
Alexander Hoffmann, leader of the CSU parliamentary group at the Bundestag, serves as interim head until an official successor is elected in plenary session.
Thorsten Frei, currently head of the federal chancellery, is the most frequently cited candidate. However, his appointment would require Merz to find a replacement for his current post.
The first regular session of the group after the summer break is scheduled for September 8, 2026. The CDU presidium is deliberating as of July 20, 2026.