Global Times

World: Merkel’s last ‘tough day’ with SPD

Pressure mounts as Germany’s coalition talks face failure

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German Chancellor Angela Merkel said her conservati­ves still had high hurdles to clear in Thursday’s talks on forming a coalition with the Social Democrats (SPD), who are pressing for accelerate­d European integratio­n.

Merkel, weakened by an election setback in September, turned to the left-leaning SPD to seek a re-run of their socalled “grand coalition” after the collapse in November of talks on a three-way coalition untested at national level.

The chancellor, who commands wide respect abroad after more than 12 years in power, needs coalition talks to succeed to avoid further erosion of her personal authority and weakening of German internatio­nal influence, not least in the EU.

Speaking at the start of the final day of explorator­y talks that could lead to formal negotiatio­ns, Merkel said it would be a tough day but she recognized that Germans expected results.

“Of course we also have in mind that we have to create a good policy platform for our country. So it’s going to be a tough day,” she said.

SPD leader Martin Schulz, a former president of the European Parliament, made clear his priority was Europe.

“On the last day of explorator­y talks we will make clear that above all this must be a new start for the EU,” he told reporters. “If we join a government it will be on the condition that it makes Europe strong.”

Schulz has called for a United States of Europe by 2025 – an idea rejected by senior conservati­ves, many of whom are wary of such ambitious reform plans they fear could see Germany funnel more of its taxpayers’ money to other EU states.

However, Merkel helped lead Europe through its twin euro zone and refugee crises and is adept at finding compromise­s, especially on European issues.

Should the parties fail to reach a deal on Thursday they could extend the talks, though President Frank-Walter Steinmeier is eager for an agreement, keenly aware that businesses want a stable coalition to end uncertaint­y and avoid another vote.

In signs of incrementa­l progress in the talks, negotiator­s agreed to reduce use of the weed killer glyphosate, draft plans seen by Reuters showed.

SPD Secretary General Lars Klingbeil told party members in a video message the party was striving for improvemen­ts in labor, health, education and family policy, and on Europe.

“We’re fighting for that,” he said in a video message, adding that the final day of explorator­y talks would show “whether we can cut through the knot on these big issues.”

Participan­ts have described the negotiatio­ns as “good,” but SPD leaders need to convince their party members and are offering them a vote on January 21 on whether to proceed.

Merkel has ruled with the SPD in a sometimes unwieldy “grand coalition” – or ‘GroKo’ – in two of her three previous terms in office, including in the last parliament from 2013-17.

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