BFF-10 Germany’s SPD in all-or-nothing vote on Merkel alliance

833

ZCZC

BFF-10

GERMANY-POLITICS

Germany’s SPD in all-or-nothing vote on Merkel alliance

BONN, Jan 21, 2018 (BSS/AFP) – Germany’s divided Social Democrats will hold
a crunch vote Sunday on whether to pursue a coalition deal with Chancellor
Angela Merkel’s conservatives, or plunge the nation into political turmoil.

At an extraordinary congress in the western city of Bonn, 600 delegates
from the centre-left SPD and its 45-member board will have their say on
entering into formal talks for a renewed alliance with Merkel’s centre-right
CDU/CSU bloc.

The stakes could scarcely be higher for Merkel as a “no” vote would leave
her with the option of leading an unstable minority government — a prospect
she has baulked at — or face snap polls.

Horst Seehofer, leader of Merkel’s Bavarian CSU sister party, said a thumbs
down from the congress would be “a political catastrophe” for Germany.

“I can only appeal to everyone to get it together and help bring about a
government,” he said in a recent interview with Bild newspaper.

The outcome is far from certain after leading SPD members savaged a
coalition blueprint painstakingly thrashed out by the three parties this
month, complaining it contained too many concessions on issues such as
migration, taxes and healthcare.

– ‘#NoGroKo’ –

With his career on the line, SPD leader Martin Schulz has been criss-
crossing the country trying to sell sceptical party members on the idea of
another “GroKo”, as the grand coalition is known in German.

In a letter to party members Friday, Schulz stressed the vote’s “enormous
importance for the future of Germany… all of Europe and the SPD”.

He told Der Spiegel news weekly that a defeat would “very quickly” trigger
new elections in which voters would be likely to “punish” the conservatives
but also the SPD.

Pitted against him is the fiery chief of the party’s youth wing, Kevin
Kuehnert, who has been on his own “#NoGroKo” tour, arguing that the party
would be better served spending the next four years in the opposition.

“I’m very optimistic that we have a realistic chance at winning this vote,”
he told reporters Thursday.

– Crown slipping –

Germany has been stuck in political limbo since September’s inconclusive
general election saw mainstream parties bleed support to the far-right AfD,
which tapped into anger over Merkel’s open-door refugee policy.

Bruised by his party’s worst result in decades, Schulz initially vowed to
go into opposition but then caved to pressure to reconsider after Merkel’s
attempt at a novel tie-up with two smaller parties collapsed in November.

MORE/MSY/1007 hrs

ZCZC

BFF-11

GERMANY-POLITICS-2-LAST

The U-turn angered many grassroots SPD’ers, who believed some time on the
opposition benches would help the 150-year-old party regain its fighting
spirit.

Merkel, often dubbed the world’s most powerful woman, has been largely
absent from the global stage as the domestic drama has played out, and she is
increasingly described by commentators as entering the twilight of her rule.

With her hopes for a fourth term now squarely in the hands of the SPD, the
veteran leader has urged party delegates to make “a responsible decision” and
back the “fair” coalition roadmap.

The 28-page in-principle agreement that lays the basis for future
government policies promises more spending on childcare, education and
pensions as well as joining France in a push to reform the EU.

– Hurdles ahead –

But critics within the SPD have bemoaned the party’s failure to secure a
tax hike for the rich or a restructuring of the country’s two-tier health
care system — two major campaign pledges.

They have also voiced dismay at the document’s mention of limiting asylum
seeker arrivals to around 200,000 a year, a flagship CSU demand.

Schulz has since insisted that many details still need to be ironed out and
proposed that any future coalition government be put under review after two
years.

A Forsa survey published Thursday found that 61 percent of SPD voters were
in favour of moving on to formal coalition talks.

The same poll found that the SPD would score just 18 percent if elections
were held now, below the 20.5 percent garnered in September.

Even if party delegates give the green light to open formal coalition
talks, another hurdle looms on the path to a new government.

Schulz has pledged that any final coalition agreement will still be put to
a vote by more than 400,000 rank-and-file SPD members.

BSS/AFP/MSY/1007 hrs