Angela Merkel has warned against the renewal of the far right in Europe as EU leaders descend on Brussels today to launch the hunt for a new generation of top officials in the wake of elections that shook up traditional alliances.

In an interview with CNN the day after the European elections, the German Chancellor said there is 'work to be done' and that the country must face up 'to the spectres of the past.'

'We have to tell our young people what history has brought over us and others,' she said.

'In Germany, obviously, they always have to be seen in a certain context, in the context of our past, which means we have to be that much more vigilant than others.'

German Chancellor Angela Merkel at a European People's Party (EPP) leader meeting ahead of a special EU summit in Brussels today

President of the European Commission Jean-Claude Juncker steps out of his car today as he arrives for the EPP meeting

European Council President Donald Tusk arrives for a meeting in Brussels today after the surge in populist votes in the European elections

With Merkel stepping down as Chancellor in 2021, her political allies in the centre fear nationalist and populist forces from both the left and right.

And the Chancellor said moderates will have to responding by showing 'why we are for democracy, why we try to bring about solutions, why we always have to put ourselves into the other person's shoes, why we stand-up against intolerance, why we show no tolerance towards violations of human rights.'

Italy's Silvio Berlusconi arrives for a meeting of the European People's Party today

Her comments come just days after Felix Klein, the government's top official against anti-Semitism, said Jews should be cautious about where they choose to wear the Kippah.

Germany has also seen a rise in the number of anti-Semitic and anti-foreigner incidents over the last year.

The four days of balloting that drew to a close on Sunday across the European Union's 28 countries ended the domination of the main centre-right and centre-left parties in Parliament and established the anti-EU forces on the right and the environmentalists on the left as forces to be reckoned with.

The rise in support for parties hostile to the EU was partly credited for a rise in turnout in several countries. The overall turnout, 50.5 percent, was the highest in 25 years, up eight percent since 2016.

And the results were partly seen as an indictment of European leaders and the federalist direction of EU politics during a parliamentary term in which Brussels has struggled to deal with the migration crisis. It has also seen Britain vote to leave the EU.

Germany's Manfred Weber - who is backed by Merkel to replace Juncker - arrives for the EPP meeting today

Romanian President Klaus Werner Ioannis (left) and Greek opposition New Democracy Party leader Kyriakos Mitsotakis (right) arrive to attend the meeting in Brussels

Cypriot President Nicos Anastasiades (left) walks with European Council President Tusk ahead of the summit today

The German Chancellor told CNN that young people must be made aware of history to counter the rise of the far right in Europe

German Chancellor Angela Merkel's centre-right movement also lost ground in the European elections

Guy Verhofstadt, leader of the Liberals and the parliament's chief Brexit negotiator, told the Daily Mail the results showed European politics was as 'fragmented' as ever and that 'European unity is certainly under threat'.

However, he said: 'This is not necessarily a bad thing. This opens up a window for others to push for desperately needed reforms to the EU.'

Mr Verhofstadt added: 'We need to create an EU that is capable of defending our interests, because in the world of today no one else will.'

Italian Deputy Premier and Interior Minister Matteo Salvini has reached out to other nationalist parties in Europe in an attempt to form an international group

The results could make the business of governing Europe even trickier, leaving the Parliament deadlocked over key issues to come, including immigration, a major trade agreement with the United States, global warming, regulation of the tech industry and, of course, Brexit.

The outcome of the election is already setting off a power struggle, as EU officials begin the process of selecting the next wave of leaders.

France's pro-EU president and the leader of Italy's euroskeptic, far-right movement began jockeying for the role of chief powerbroker on the continent on Monday.

In France, President Emmanuel Macron's party narrowly lost to the French far-right, led by Marine Le Pen. Macron, whose party was poised to secure 21 seats to 22 for Le Pen's National Rally, spent Monday busily amassing allies ahead of a summit Tuesday in Brussels, hoping to build a durable pro-EU coalition.

In Italy, Matteo Salvini's right-wing League party won a third of the country's vote and is poised to become one of the biggest parties in the European Parliament with 28 seats in the 751-seat legislature. But his ambitions reached higher.

French President Emmanuel Macron has been weakened by his decision to get personally involved in the European elections only to come second to Marine Le Pen's far-right party

French far-right Rassemblement National (RN) President and member of French Parliament Marine Le Pen delivers a speech after the projections for the results of the European Parliament elections

By midday, he had already spoken to Le Pen, Hungary's hardline anti-immigrant prime minister, Viktor Orban, and Brexit Party leader Nigel Farage and was promising to singlehandedly bring together a contradiction in terms — an international group of nationalists.

'We want to be a group that has at least 100 members and has the ambition to be at least 150, if everyone can overcome jealousies, sympathies, antipathies. To create an alternative, you play. You don't do it by turning up your nose,' he said.

Germany's warning to Jews on the dangers of wearing the traditional kippah German daily Bild published a cut-out-and-use kippa on Monday in a bid to fight rising anti-Semitism, after Jews were warned about the potential dangers of wearing the traditional skullcap in Germany. Over the weekend, Felix Klein, the German government's commissioner on anti-Semitism, said he 'cannot advise Jews to wear the kippa everywhere all the time in Germany', in an interview given to the Funke regional press group. Israeli President Reuven Rivlin voiced shock at Klein's warning and said it was a 'capitulation to anti-Semitism' and evidence that Jews are unsafe in Germany. Bild, Germany's top-selling daily newspaper, waded into the debate, calling on readers to 'stand in solidarity with (their) Jewish neighbours' by making 'their own kippa', bearing the star of David, to 'raise the flag against anti-Semitism'. Germany, like other western countries, has watched with alarm as anti-Semitic and other racist hate speech and violence have increased in recent years while the political climate has coarsened and grown more polarised. Anti-Semitic crimes rose by 20 percent in Germany last year, according to interior ministry data which blamed nine out of 10 cases on the extreme right. The arrival in parliament of the far-right AfD, whose leaders openly question Germany's culture of atonement for World War II atrocities, has also contributed to the change in atmosphere. Chancellor Angela Merkel has also deplored 'another form of anti-Semitism' stemming from a major asylum-seeker influx, with many coming from Muslim countries like Syria, Afghanistan or Iraq. 'That the number of anti-Semitic crimes is increasing should be a cause of great concern for all of us in Germany,' Merkel's spokesman Steffen Seibert said on Monday. 'It is the task of the state to ensure that everyone can move freely with a kippa anywhere in our country and we stand by that responsibility.' The Central Council of Jews in Germany has already issued several warnings about wearing the kippa in public. Advertisement

The centre-right European People's Party and the centre-left Socialists & Democrats have dominated the parliament with a combined majority since direct elections were first held in 1979. With results still coming in, the EPP was on track to secure 180 seats, down from 217 five years ago. The Socialists were slated to win 145, down from 187.

Riding what they called Europe's 'green wave,' environmentalist parties seeking action on climate change made strong gains, notably in Germany. Another mainstream formation, the free-market ALDE group backed by Macron, saw its stake in the Parliament rise to 109 seats, from 68 in 2014.

For the Parliament to choose a European Commission president and ultimately to pass legislation, new and uncomfortable alliances must be forged, and nearly all will require some combination of ALDE and the Greens.

Well aware of the far-right's potential to turn against itself, Macron launched a flurry of meetings ahead of the dinner summit Tuesday where the EU countries' presidents and prime ministers will take stock of the election results.

He started with Spain and was due to hold talks with the leaders of Belgium, the Czech Republic, Germany, Hungary, Poland and Slovakia.

'The future majority of the European Parliament goes through us, without question. There isn't one without us,' Pascal Canfin, one of the leading candidates from Macron's party, told France Inter radio.

In Germany, where Chancellor Angela Merkel's centre-right movement also lost ground, leaders of the country's governing parties met to weigh the fallout from their worst post-World War II showing in a nationwide election.

The key job to be filled is that of president of the European Commission, the union's powerful chief executive, a five-year post currently held by Jean-Claude Juncker.

Under EU treaty law, the European Council of 28 national leaders nominates a commission president, then the new 751-member parliament ratifies their choice.

But the procedure, while seemingly straightforward, masks a complex power struggle between rival states and ideological blocs and between the leaders and parliament itself.

Juncker's deputy and the centre-left challenger for the top job, former Dutch minister Frans Timmermans, compares the ruthless intrigue to 'Game of Thrones'.

And the game kicks off on Tuesday, when European Council president Donald Tusk hosts the EU leaders for a summit dinner in Brussels to lay out the ground rules.

Many in Brussels argue that the European project is best served by a 'political commission' headed by a president with a mandate from the trans-national parliament.

But most of the leaders think the union's legitimacy derives from its member states and that the Council should be able to pick one of their own, someone with leadership experience.

The results of the EU elections did not strengthen parliament's hand - except perhaps for the boost of the larger than expected voter turnout.

While a threatened surge of eurosceptic and far-right populist parties was contained, the pro-Europe centre was fragmented, with liberals and Greens gaining ground.

In previous years, a coalition of the socialist S&D and the conservative EPP was able to wield a majority. Now they cannot govern without the liberal ALDE or the Greens.

Italian Deputy Prime Minister and leader of far-right League party Matteo Salvini celebrated the election results in Milan last night - his emerged as the largest party in Italy

And this complicates their choice of a 'spitzenkandidat' - or lead candidate.

As lead candidate of the EPP, which lost ground but remains the largest voting unit, Bavarian conservative Manfred Weber thinks he should lead the Commission.

'We won the election and the EPP candidate, Manfred Weber, will be the president of the Commission,' insisted party president Joseph Daul as votes were counted.

Despite his confidence, the party has lost ground, starting with 40 seats in the election.

Merkel gives up hope on her successor and plans to stay in office German Chancellor Angela Merkel appears to have withdrawn support for her successor, claiming she is not up to the top job. Annegret Kramp-Karrenbauer, also known as AKK, replaced Merkel as leader of the ruling Christian Democratic Union (CDU) last year. But after a series of gaffes and the worst election defeat in the party's history, Merkel has emerged more determined than ever to stay in office until the end of her term in 2021. Government sources claim Merkel has refused to spend any more political capital on supporting AKK. The new leader has slid in opinion polls in recent months, while her mistakes have raised questions about her suitability for the role of Chancellor. Kramp-Karrenbauer's victory last December in a tight race to succeed Merkel as leader of the CDU put the 56-year-old in pole position to become the next German Chancellor. But Merkel now wants to hold on to her position until 2021 and will face an awkward encounter with her rumoured successor when the party meets next week to reflect on their election result. In March, Kramp-Karrenbauer drew sharp criticism from her Social Democrat coalition partners for poking fun at transgender people in a light-hearted carnival speech. In February, she was ridiculed for addressing a high-profile meeting of her conservative CDU party by calling them Social Democrats. In an opinion piece in its online edition on Tuesday, the Sueddeutsche Zeitung wrote: 'Annegret Kramp-Karrenbauer is making so many mistakes that her suitability as chancellor must be in doubt.' Advertisement

On paper, eight of the 28 EU leaders hail from EPP parties, but Hungarian premier Viktor Orban's Fidesz is suspended and Austrian Chancellor Sebastian Kurz was sacked on Monday.

Timmermans, a centre-left Dutchman with more executive experience, will have the S&D's backing and ALDE, while dubious about the process, could back Margrethe Vestager.

The Danish competition commissioner might win the backing of French President Emmanuel Macron, while Germany's Chancellor Angela Merkel backs Weber.

But, according to one senior European official, if it comes down to a Franco-German clash the leaders may choose to avoid a crisis and back a Timmermans compromise.

'I imagine that a certain number of leaders will try to torpedo a spitzenkandidat, but not all the spitzenkandidaten,' the official said on condition of anonymity.

The big three groups are united in opposition to the far-right eurosceptics, but there are signs the Greens, ALDE and the S&D might prefer a progressive candidate over the EPP.

Vestager is a younger choice, has a certain profile as the woman who took on the US internet giants as a regulator, and would be the first female president.

But she comes from Denmark - a non-core member which opted out of the euro and the Schengen passport-free zone - and would probably not have her home government's backing.

She might have Macron, but the French leader's decision to invest himself personally in the campaign only to come in second to Marine Le Pen's far-right list has weakened him.

Enter Timmermans. 'Everyone recognises his intellectual brio. He has fought for the rule of law with passion,' the senior official said, suggesting the ground is shifting.

Merkel heir faces widespread criticism after proposal to regulate online opinion Annegret Kramp-Karrenbauer (left) replaced Merkel as head of the CDU last December and is expected to seek the top job when Merkel's term ends in 2021 German Chancellor Angela Merkel's favoured successor plunged into a new social media storm Tuesday, with her apparent call for limits to free speech around elections stoking further anger rather than putting down a raging youth-led YouTube revolt. The comment by Annegret Kramp-Karrenbauer came after her Christian Democratic Union (CDU) and its centre-left coalition partner SPD suffered their worst-ever results in Sunday's European election. The CDU, in particular, had been put on the back foot in the days leading up to the polls as 70 YouTube stars urged voters to punish the party for its failure to take adequate action to halt global warming. Addressing the debacle on Monday night, Kramp-Karrenbauer called for checks on the online influencers, saying that if 70 newspaper editors had made a concerted call to boycott parties ahead of an election, that would be classed 'clearly as propaganda'. 'The question is... what are rules from the analogue realm and which rules should apply to the digital realm? 'I'll tackle this discussion quite aggressively,' said Kramp-Karrenbauer, or AKK as she is dubbed in Germany. Her comments immediately unleashed a storm on social media with #AKKRuecktritt (AKKresign), #annegate and #AKKgate making up the top three topics trending on Twitter in Germany. Kramp-Karrenbauer then took to Twitter to defend her comments, saying it was 'ridiculous to insinuate that I want to regulate expressions of opinion'. 'Freedom of opinion is a precious value in a democracy. 'What we have to talk about are rules that apply during elections,' she wrote on Twitter. But that only fanned the fires, with both leading media and political figures rounding in to remind her of article five in the German constitution guaranteeing freedom of opinion, speech and writing. 'With her insulting musings on "propaganda" and control of it, Annegret Kramp-Karrenbauer confirms the criticism of young YouTubers - and reveals her authoritarian thinking,' said Spiegel Online. Annegret Kramp-Karrenbauer and Angela Merkel at the beginning of a CDU board meeting following the European Parliament election, at which the party suffered heavy losses For the German Federation of Journalists (DJV), AKK's call was 'not just nonsense but also a violation of the constitution'. 'The CDU party leader obviously has no plan how to go with free expressions of opinion on the Internet,' DJV chairman Frank Ueberall told the Heilbronner Stimme newspaper. 'Her emotional reaction after the elections also shows a large degree of helplessness in the communications with the digital world.' Lars Klingbeil, general secretary of the Social Democratic Party (SPD), also warned that any attempt at limiting freedom of speech would 'definitely not be possible with my party'. 'This is absurd. Nobody would get upset if an actor or an athlete made an election recommendation', he added. AKK, 56, replaced Merkel as head of the CDU last December and is expected to seek the top job when Merkel's term ends in 2021. The CDU has been struggling to find a response after it was caught off guard by an almost hour-long blistering attack by online star Rezo, who blamed the centre-right-led coalition for failing to tackle poverty and climate change. Put online on May 18, the clip had been viewed 12.7 million times by Tuesday, tumbling Merkel's party into crisis-fighting mode. Kramp-Karrenbauer was heavily criticised after she called for checks on online influencers, saying that if 70 newspaper editors had made a call to boycott parties ahead of an election it would be classed 'clearly as propaganda' Rezo had also received the backing of 70 other influential online stars, and two days before the EU polls posted a call to shun the CDU, SPD as well as the far-right AfD. The centre-right party ended up receiving just 13 percent of the vote among under-30s, compared to the Greens, which garnered three times as many. The CDU's members themselves have also spoken out critically against the party's leadership's handling of the online revolt. 'Our own house has completely failed in the last few weeks, and now others should be to blame?', asked the chairman of the party's youth wing chairman Tilman Kuban in newspaper Welt. Referring to the response of the CDU to Rezo's attack, Kuban said: 'Anyone who answers a YouTuber with an eleven-page thesis would do better to get their own house in order rather than insult the next generation.' Advertisement