German Chancellor Angela Merkel insisted Monday that she can work well with any potential successor as leader of her party, including a one-time rival seeking a comeback after a decade-long absence.
Merkel also stressed that her centre-right Christian Democratic Union is committed to its troubled coalition with the centre-left Social Democrats.
Merkel announced a week ago that she plans to give up the CDU leadership after 18 years but remain as Germany's chancellor.
There are three high-profile candidates to succeed her: CDU general secretary Annegret Kramp-Karrenbauer, who is the closest to Merkel's centrist approach; and two contenders who stand for a more conservative profile, former parliamentary leader Friedrich Merz and Health Minister Jens Spahn.
Germany's chancellor of the past 13 years has said she is ready to continue in that job for the rest of the parliamentary term, which is supposed to last until 2021.
Pressed Monday on whether she really wants to do that, she replied: "I don't know of readiness without willingness."
Merkel said she had "always found solutions" with Merz in the past, though "of course we were not always of the same opinion."