Germany’s
Parliament elected Angela Merkel for her fourth term as chancellor on
Wednesday, putting an end to nearly six months of political drift in Europe’s
biggest economy.
Lawmakers
voted 364-315 to reelect Merkel, Germany’s leader since 2005, who ran
unopposed. The coalition of Merkel’s conservative Christian Democratic Union,
its Bavaria-only sister party the Christian Social Union, and the center-left
Social Democrats have 399 of the 709 seats in parliament.
Merkel will
head a much-changed Cabinet, with the governing parties — which are traditional
rivals — keen to send signals of renewal after a September election in which
all lost significant ground. There are new faces in the most important posts:
the finance, foreign, economy and interior ministries.
The same
parties have governed for the past four years but putting together the new
administration has been unprecedentedly hard work.
Wednesday’s
parliamentary vote came 171 days after the election, nearly double the previous
record. The Social Democrats initially planned to go into opposition after
crashing to their worst result since World War II, but Germany’s president
nudged them into a reluctant about-turn after Merkel’s talks with two smaller
parties collapsed in November.
Merkel was
able to take office only after two-thirds of the Social Democrats’ members
approved in a ballot the coalition deal clinched last month. At least 35
coalition lawmakers didn’t support her Wednesday, though that was in line with
results at the beginning of her two previous “grand coalitions” of Germany’s
biggest parties.
She will
have to hold together what is potentially her most fragile coalition yet in
what is widely expected to be her last term, while also addressing challenges
such as a potential Europe-U.S. trade war and seeking agreement with France and
others on the future of a fractious European Union.
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