Testing time
Merkel’s party gives potential partners three weeks
German Chancellor Angela Merkel attends a session at the Bundestag (lower house of parliament) on Tuesday in Berlin. Merkel faced the greatest crisis of her career on Monday after negotiations to form a new government collapsed, shaking a country that is Europe’s political and economic anchor
Chancellor Angela Merkel’s right-hand man, Peter Altmaier, appealed to political parties on Tuesday to decide in the next three weeks whether they can form a stable government and drag Germany out of a political impasse.
The collapse of talks between Merkel’s conservative bloc, the pro-business Free Democrats (FDP) and environmentalist Greens has raised the prospect of new elections.
It has also cast some doubt over whether Merkel will serve a fourth term after her conservatives won the most seats in a September 24 election.
“We must be in a situation in next three weeks where there is clarity about whether there can be a stable government on the basis of this election result,” Altmaier, head of the chancellery and acting finance minister, told ZDF television.
He said it was clear that his conservatives had a mandate to govern and that the parties should support President Frank-Walter Steinmeier’s appeal to parties to take responsibility and come together to form a government.
Steinmeier is meeting leaders of the main parties this week, including the Greens and FDP later on Tuesday.
“We stand by our responsibility to ensure this country has a stable and reliable government,” Altmaier said. “Like ‘Made in Germany’, we are known for having a stable and reliable government.”
He made a thinly veiled appeal to the Social Democrats (SPD) to rethink their refusal to form a government with Merkel after voters punished them for sharing power with her for four years.
“We must give the SPD a chance to think (about their responsibilities),” said Altmaier.
Merkel has said she would prefer new elections to leading an unstable minority government. Until a government is formed, Merkel continues as acting chancellor and her previous ministers remain in their posts.
Andrea Nahles, head of the SPD’s parliamentary group reiterated that it did not want to prop up Merkel with another “grand coalition.”
“We are not an emergency stop-gap for Merkel,” she said.
However, she said the SPD would use the talks with Steinmeier to try to find future solutions. “We should talk about how we form a process that leads our country into a new, stable government.”