Global Times

Merkel warns tough coalition talks

‘Very different positions’ on some policies, deadline nears

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Chancellor Angela Merkel warned that “serious difference­s” remain between the parties hoping to form Germany’s next government but voiced hope a deal would emerge Thursday, hours before a deadline that could trigger snap polls.

We have “very different positions” on some policy issues, Merkel told reporters, adding however that “I believe it can work.”

After weeks of quarrelsom­e explorator­y talks, Merkel’s CDU/CSU bloc, the pro-business Free Democrats (FDP) and the left-leaning Greens are holding a final day of negotiatio­ns before announcing whether they have found enough common ground to begin formal coalition negotiatio­ns.

The awkward bedfellows, who differ on everything from refugees to climate protection and EU reforms, have been pushed together by September’s inconclusi­ve election, which left Merkel badly weakened as the far-right Alternativ­e for Germany (AfD) lured millions of voters.

The stakes are especially high for Merkel, eyeing a fourth term, who set the Thursday deadline to reach an agreement in principle with the goal of having a new government in place by Christmas.

“If the conservati­ves, the Greens and the FDP can’t pull together, there’s no way to avoid new elections,” Der Spiegel news weekly wrote.

“No one wants that. But is that enough to justify an alliance?”

The potential tie-up, dubbed a “Jamaica coalition” because the parties’ colors match those of the Jamaican flag, is untested at the national level and how stable such a government would be is anyone’s guess.

The final round of precoaliti­on talks is expected to run late into the night as party officials tackle issues including migration.

Merkel is facing “her most dangerous night,” Germany’s best-selling Bild newspaper said.

“It’s not just the chancellor’s fourth term that depends on the success of Jamaica, but her entire political career.”

Mindful of the anger over the 2015 refugee influx that helped carry the anti-Islam AfD into the Bundestag lower house of parliament, migration remains one of the most contentiou­s items on the docket, with the conservati­ves eager to tighten asylum policy.

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