Abstract

ABSTRACT The Marriage Equality Act (2017) provides an example for Chancellor Angela Merkel's strategy of ‘leading from behind’ in the form of evolved facilitation as she changed her stance from publicly resisting to enabling this policy. Merkel's objections against marriage equality were shared by large parts of the Christian Democratic Union/Christian Social Union (CDU/CSU): A draft version of the bill was postponed for two years in the justice committee due to internal conflicts in the CDU/CSU. Scholars argue that Merkel's shift from blocking to enabling the reform has been influenced by international as well as domestic developments. The focus of this paper is on a domestic factor that has been neglected so far, namely interactions between the far right and the conservative camp. Based on data from a case study on ‘anti-gender’ mobilisations against marriage equality in Germany and their influence on the parliamentary process, this article analyses shifts in the conservative camp.

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