Merkel in favour of snap poll
over minority government
NEWS / ANGELA MERKEL
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German Chancellor Angela Merkel has
said she is ready to take her centre-
right alliance into a snap election than
lead a minority government, as political
uncertainty in Europe's top economy
rises.
The leader of the Christian Democratic
(CDU) party made the comments on
Monday after high-stakes negotiations
to form a coalition government broke
down.
"I'm very sceptical," about the prospect
of leading a minority government,
Merkel told public broadcaster ZDF.
She said Germany needs stable
leadership "that does not need to seek a
majority for every decision".
President's stark warning
The chancellor had entered three-way
coalition talks after a general election
in September failed to deliver a
majority for any party.
The weeks-long discussions included
Merkel's Christian Democratic political
alliance (CDU/CSU), the Greens and the
Free Democratic Party (FDP).
But late on
Sunday, the pro-
business FDP
withdrew from
the negotiations,
plunging
Germany into
uncertainty and sending the euro
falling.
Speaking after the breakdown of the
talks, which has cast doubt on Merkel's
fourth term in office, FDP leader
Christian Lindner suggested his party
could not offer any more compromises
on issues such as clean energy and
migration.
"We were conducting exploratory talks,
not forming a government," he said.
"At the end, you decide whether trust
has grown, whether there is a common
vision. And it is exactly this common
vision for the country that was
missing."
Ahead of Merkel's statement, President
Frank-Walter Steinmeir made it clear
that he wants to avoid a new election,
stressing that the country's political
leaders needed to return to the
negotiating table.
"In the election on September 24, the
parties vied to take on responsibility of
Germany," said Steinmeier, who holds
the power to call a fresh election.
"This responsibility, in accordance with
the German constitution, cannot simply
be given back to the electorate."
Political deadlock
In September's poll, Merkel's CDU/CSU
secured 33 percent of the vote, down
about nine percent compared with the
previous election in 2013 and failing to
form a single-party government.
The FDP gained
10.7 percent of
the votes and
the Greens
scored 8.4
percent.
Merkel's former
partners, the Social Democrats (SPD)
have consistently ruled out being part
of another so-called grand coalition
since scoring just 20.5 percent of the
vote in September's vote.
"Based on the election result of
September 24, we are not prepared to
enter a grand coalition," said SPD leader
Martin Schulz, adding that his party is
"not afraid" of a new election.
"We think it's important that the
citizens of our country, the sovereign
voters, are able to evaluate the
situation again."
German stability questioned
Josef Janning, head of the Berlin office
of the European Council on Foreign
Relations, warned that Europe's major
power was faced with the prospect of
being run by a timid government with
little ability or desire to engage in bold
policymaking at home or abroad.
"It is likely the next government will
not necessarily be a stronger
government because it has come about
in a rather cumbersome and conflictual
process, which doesn't make for a very
energetic and ambitious government.
"It will rather be one that will try to
pragmatically continue and muddle
through, rather than shake up Europe
with new ideas," he said.
Al Jazeera's Jamal Elshayyal, reporting
from Germany's capital Berlin, said the
coming days "will prove crucial not only
in shaping Germany's immediate
political future, but also that of the
European Union.
"Even if the country does avoid having
to vote again and whatever shape the
next government will take, the stability
that German leadership once
represented is now being brought into
question".
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