Merkel set for fourth term

Germany’s Social Democratic Party said on Sunday its members have voted in favour
of joining a coalition with Angela Merkel’s conservative bloc, clearing the last major hurdle to the formation of a new government and a fourth term for the veteran German
chancellor. Th e decision ends almost six months of uncertainty in German politics, the longest the country has been without a government in its post-war history.
Th e center-left Social Democrats had furiously debated whether to extend the so-called grand coalition for another four years after suff ering a slump in September’s election. In the end, two-thirds of the valid
votes cast by its 464 000 members favoured a coalition deal, said party treasurer Dietmar
Nietan, who oversaw the ballot. “Th is was a really important democratic decision for our country,” acting party leader Olaf Scholz told reporters in Berlin. Th e Social Democrats will put forward six names  three women and three men — to lead the ministries they will control in the  upcoming coalition in the coming days, he said. Parliament is expected to meet next week to elect Merkel as chancellor. Activists at the Social Democrats’ headquarters in Berlin had worked through the night to count the votes. A “no” vote
would have been a blow for the party’s leadership — who campaigned for members’
approval — and for Merkel, who spent months negotiating with rival parties to
form a new government. After September’s election, in which the Social Democrats received just 20.5 percent of the vote, then-leader Martin Schulz ruled out another grand coalition with Merkel.
Th is forced Merkel to negotiate with two smaller parties, one of which eventually
rejected a deal. Pressure from German President Frank- Walter Steinmeier prompted Schulz to rethink and weeks of haggling between his party and Merkel’s bloc resulted in a coalition agreement. Fewer Social Democratsapproved the deal this time round than in
2013, when 76 percent of members backed a government with Merkel. Many Social Democrats, particularly on the left, had argued that the party failed to make its mark on the last government and
wouldn’t benefi t from propping up Merkel for another term.

Leave a Reply