Political paralysis lingers in Germany
Chancellor Angela Merkel was struggling Friday to find a coalition deal with Germany’s second biggest party, as a last-ditch round of negotiations goes down to the wire with “big obstacles” left to clear.
After 18 hours of talks and still no agreement in sight between Merkel’s conservatives and the center-left Social Democrats, weary negotiators said a result would likely not emerge before dawn.
Questions surrounding Germany’s 2015 record refugee influx as well as issues related to the country’s finances were sticking points even as Europe’s biggest economy posted healthy growth for 2017 and a record surplus.
Merkel, who desperately needs to form a new government to salvage her political future, had warned that it would be a “tough day” of talks.
She said her conservative Christian Democrats would “work constructively to find the necessary compromises but we are also aware that we need to execute the right policies for our country”.
September’s inconclusive elections left Merkel without a majority and she has struggled to find partners to govern Europe’s biggest economy.
After her earlier attempt at forging a coalition with two smaller parties collapsed, she is now pinning her hopes on renewing an alliance with the Social Democrats (SPD).
SPD leader Martin Schulz also spoke of “big obstacles” on the last day of preliminary talks in which the parties were sounding each other out over whether to move on to formal coalition negotiations.
The talks are not only crucial for Merkel, but also for Schulz and the leader of Merkel’s Bavarian allies, Horst Seehofer, said political analyst Karl-Rudolf Korte of Duisburg-Essen University.
“The negotiations are not just about a coalition, but also their careers. It would be the end for all three if this coalition does not come about,” he told public broadcaster ZDF.
Germany’s economic health has stood in stark contrast to the political paralysis, which has entered a fourth month.
In fact the political talks were tripped up by the country’s strong finances, as parties had opposing views on how to manage the cash.
Seeking to push its social welfare agenda, the SPD is demanding greater relief for the lower and middle income brackets while seeking tax hikes for top earners.
But the conservatives had campaigned on a program of “tax cuts for all”.
Beyond fiscal and spending issues, the parties are struggling to fend off the encroaching far right, which has seized on anger over the influx of refugees and netted a record showing at the polls in September.
To halt a hemorrhage to the far right, Merkel’s alliance wants a tougher stance on immigration, something that is hard to sell to the center-left SPD.
Even if negotiators find a deal, it can still be torpedoed when SPD delegates and later rank-and-file members get to vote on whether the traditional labor party should once again govern in Merkel’s shadow.
Skepticism is high within the party about joining hands again with Merkel after the SPD scored a humiliating result in September’s election.
The SPD’s youth wing chief Kevin Kuehnert told Zeit Online that he would embark on a national tour to press his case to opposing a new grand coalition before a September 21 party congress.
“The mood of the party rank and file with regards to a grand coalition is still grim. That’s why I think we have a good chance,” said Kuehnert.
After all, there is little appetite for a new conservative-SPD alliance.
A survey published by Focus magazine found that only 30 percent of Germans favor a return of the grand coalition, while 34 percent prefer new elections.
Another poll, published by public broadcaster ARD, found that only 45 percent viewed a new GroKo positively, while 52 percent did not.
And a third survey, for business paper Handelsblatt, showed that 56 percent believed Merkel would not see out her four-year term.
(Source: AFP)