German Chancellor Angela Merkel said Tuesday she is prepared
to make “painful compromises” in a final round of talks to seal a coalition
deal for her fourth term and
end months of political limbo in Europe’s top
economy.
As negotiators from Merkel’s CDU party, her Bavarian CSU ally
and the Social Democratic Party (SPD) gathered for one last push to clinch an
agreement on a renewed “grand coalition”, Merkel said it was time to end the
political uncertainty.
“We live in turbulent times,” she said, pointing to heavy
losses in recent days on global stock markets.
“We need a government that offers dependability in the
interests of the people.”
Merkel said all sides would “still need to make painful
compromises” to get a deal.
“I am ready to if we can ensure that the advantages outweigh
the disadvantages in the end,” she said.
Despite the protracted haggling — the talks were initially
supposed to end at the weekend — the parties sounded upbeat on meeting
Tuesday’s self-imposed deadline.
SPD chief Martin Schulz said there was “good reason to
believe that we’ll reach the end today”.
“I think that today will be the decisive day as to whether
the three parties — CDU, CSU and SPD — will finish a joint coalition agreement
on whose basis a stable government for Germany can be built,” he said.
However CDU vice president Volker Bouffier warned that the
agreement was not yet certain.
“Nothing is guaranteed,” he said.
Party sources said the main sticking points were
disagreements over healthcare, labour policy and defence spending.
SPD to have final say
Merkel, in power for over 12 years, has pinned her hopes on a
repeat alliance with the SPD after September’s inconclusive election left her
without a ruling majority.
But commentators have already dubbed the tie-up a “coalition
of losers” after both parties slumped to their worst results in decades in the
polls, while the far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD) took nearly 13 percent
of the vote.
Faced with the option of a snap election that could further
boost the AfD or the prospect of heading an unstable minority government,
Merkel opted to woo back the SPD — her junior partner for two of her three
terms since 2005.
Even if both sides end up signing a coalition agreement that
lays out the next government’s policies, a new Merkel-led government is not yet
guaranteed.
Schulz has promised to put any coalition accord to a
yes-or-no referendum by the SPD’s 440,000 rank-and-file members.
Observers expect the vote to be tight, with the SPD’s left
and youth wings fiercely opposed and still fuming over Schulz’s decision to
consider another Merkel alliance despite initially vowing to take the party
into opposition.
The SPD referendum result is expected in early March. If all
goes well for Merkel, a new government could be in place by the end of next
month.
Stumbling blocks
Although Merkel is often described as Europe’s most powerful
woman, her struggles to form a government have harmed her political standing at
home and abroad.
Germany’s European partners in particular are eager for an
end to the gridlock in Berlin that has held up decision-making just as French
President Emmanuel Macron is pushing for major EU reforms.
While Merkel and the SPD are open to the French plans for
deeper eurozone integration, the SPD is more enthusiastic about some of
Macron’s more ambitious proposals such as a joint eurozone budget and finance
minister.
Schulz said Monday the would-be coalition partners had
successfully finished the European chapter of their talks.
While details remain vague, the former European Parliament
chief said they had agreed to support a eurozone investment budget and end “the
austerity diktat”.
But they are still at loggerheads about the SPD’s demands to
limit short-term work contracts and overhaul Germany’s two-tier healthcare
system.
They are also at odds on boosting defence spending, party
sources told DPA news agency.
While Merkel’s conservatives want to increase spending to
bring it closer to NATO targets, as demanded by US President Donald Trump, the
SPD is sceptical. Merkel said Tuesday that Germany’s “international
dependability” was at stake in the negotiations.
A new poll for Bild newspaper found that the lengthy
wrangling has hurt both main parties.
Support for the CDU/CSU fell from 33 to 30.5 percent, while
the SPD slipped from September’s historic low of 20.5 percent to 17 percent —
leaving the coalition hopefuls without a combined majority.
The AfD meanwhile scored a record 15 percent.
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