Gulf Today

MERKEL ALLY SAYS SPD TIE-UP BEST OPTION

All involved parties trying hard to avoid another election

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BERLIN: A renewed coalition between Chancellor Angela Merkel’s CDU/CSU conservati­ves and the centre-left Social Democrats is “the best option for Germany,” CSU head Horst Seehofer said on Sunday, raising hopes for an end to the political impasse.

Merkel has been scrambling to avert snap elections after talks to form a new government with the pro-business Free Democrats (FDP) and the left-leaning Greens broke down a week ago.

The Social Democrats had vowed to go into opposition after a disappoint­ing showing in the September general election, but in a U-turn on Friday SPD chief Martin Schulz said he was ready for talks with Merkel’s bloc.

“An alliance between the conservati­ves and the SPD is the best option for Germany, better in any case than ‘Jamaica’, new elections or a minority government,” Seehofer, the leader of Merkel’s Bavarian sister party, told the Bild am Sonntag newspaper.

The failed three-way tie-up between the CDU/CSU, the Greens and the FDP had been dubbed “Jamaica” because the parties’ colours match those of the Caribbean country’s lag.

Merkel, who has baulked at the idea of a repeat election, on Saturday said she wanted to form a government “very soon”.

Talks with the SPD should be based on “mutual respect” and “compromise”, she added.

The veteran chancellor, who is eyeing a fourth term, will meet with top brass from her CDU party on Sunday evening to discuss the way forward.

A breakthrou­gh could come on Thursday, when German President Frank-walter Steinmeier hosts talks between Merkel, Seehofer and Schulz.

Schulz had categorica­lly ruled out another stint as junior coalition partner after four years of governing in Merkel’s shadow led the SPD to its worst result in decades in the September 24 poll.

But with Europe’s top economy facing prolonged political uncertaint­y after the collapse of the Jamaica talks, and with fears that snap polls would mainly beneit the far-right AFD, Schulz bowed to pressure to soften his stance.

An Emnid survey for the Bild newspaper on Sunday showed that 52 per cent of Germans were in favour of a repeat left-right “grand coalition”.

Seehofer warned the SPD however not to come to the negotiatin­g table trying to dictate terms.

“I can only advise the SPD not to enter into talks with the conservati­ves with exaggerate­d demands, but to stay realistic,” he told the Bild daily.

“There shouldn’t be a grand coalition at any price.” FDP leader Christian Lindner, who triggered Germany’s crisis when he unilateral­ly pulled out the Jamaica talks last Sunday, also said he expected to see the SPD agree to another stint in government.

“The hurdles are lower for them than for us,” Lindner told Bild am Sonntag.

He said a “Jamaica” coalition would have “shattered into a thousand pieces within months”, given the parties’ differing views on everything from migration to climate protection to eurozone reforms.

The SPD, who hit their lowest post-war level in the election and had vowed to go into opposition to regroup, also need to get some of their policy ideas through.

To try to secure party unity, leader Martin Schulz has promised members a vote on talks and senior SPD members have outlined their conditions, including investment in education and homes, changes in health insurance and no cap on asylum seekers.

In a foretaste of the forthcomin­g wrangling, Seehofer warned that the SPD must not set too many conditions. “There will not be a grand coalition at any price,” he said.

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 ?? Agence France-presse ?? Angela Merkel waves during a regional party conference in her home state of Mecklenbur­g Western Pomerania in Kuehlungsb­orn on Saturday.
Agence France-presse Angela Merkel waves during a regional party conference in her home state of Mecklenbur­g Western Pomerania in Kuehlungsb­orn on Saturday.

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