Global Times

Testing time

Merkel’s party gives potential partners three weeks

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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.”

 ?? Photo: AFP ??
Photo: AFP

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