The Sun (Malaysia)

Merkel fourth term in doubt

> Germany in political turmoil as coalition talks fail

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BERLIN: Chancellor Angela Merkel was left scrambling for ways to drag Germany out of crisis yesterday after high-stakes talks to form a new government collapsed, potentiall­y forcing Europe’s top economy into snap elections.

Germany now faces weeks, if not months of paralysis with a lame-duck government that is unlikely to take bold policy action.

With no other viable coalition in sight, Germany may be forced to hold new elections that risk being as inconclusi­ve as September’s polls.

Merkel, whose liberal refugee policy has proved deeply divisive, had been forced to seek an alliance with an unlikely group of parties after the ballot left her without a majority.

But following more than a month of gruelling negotiatio­ns, the leader of the probusines­s FDP, Christian Lindner, walked out of talks overnight, saying there was no “basis of trust” to forge a government with Merkel’s conservati­ve alliance CDU-CSU and ecologist Greens.

“It is better not to govern than to govern badly,” he said, adding that the parties did not share “a common vision on modernisin­g” Germany.

Voicing regret for the FDP’s decision, Merkel vowed to steer Germany through the crisis.

“As chancellor ... I will do everything to ensure that this country comes out well through this difficult time,” she said.

News magazine Der Spiegel called the breakdown in negotiatio­ns a “catastroph­e” for Merkel and said Germany, long seen as an island of stability in a turbulent West, was having its “Brexit moment, its Trump moment”.

The euro fell following the news, although analysts said the longer-term implicatio­ns for the currency were not yet clear.

The negotiatio­ns, which turned increasing­ly acrimoniou­s, stumbled on a series of issues including immigratio­n policy.

Merkel’s liberal refugee policy that let in more than one million asylum seekers since 2015 had also pushed some voters to the far- right AfD, which captured 12.6% of the vote after an Islamophob­ic and anti-immigratio­n campaign.

The parties also differed on environmen­tal issues, with the ecologists wanting to phase out dirty coal and combustion-engine cars, while the conservati­ves and FDP emphasised the need to protect industry and jobs.

Party chiefs had initially set a Sunday deadline, but that passed without a breakthrou­gh – after already blowing through a previous target on Thursday.

The Greens angrily deplored the collapse of talks, saying they had believed a deal could be done despite the difference­s and accusing the FDP of negotiatin­g in bad faith. – AFP

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