Stabroek News Sunday

Merkel tells voters: Brexit, French poll changed my view on Europe

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ZINGST, Germany (Reuters) - German Chancellor Angela Merkel told voters yesterday that Britain’s decision to leave the European Union and France’s election of President Emmanuel Macron had changed her view on the bloc, adding it was worth fighting for a stronger Europe.

Merkel’s comments, made in a speech in the Baltic Sea resort town of Zingst two months before a federal election, underline her personal determinat­ion to deepen European integratio­n if she is reelected for a fourth term.

Calling European Union membership one of Germany’s biggest strengths, Merkel said last year’s Brexit decision and elections in France and the Netherland­s, in which pro-European parties defeated populist candidates, had changed her perspectiv­e.

“For many people, including myself, something changed when we saw the Britons want to leave, when we were worried about the outcome of the elections in France and the Netherland­s,” Merkel told voters, some of whom wore straw hats with black-red-andgold hatbands, the colours of the German flag.

The centre-right chancellor admitted that the EU was far from perfect and that Brussels sometimes was too bureaucrat­ic.

“But we have realized in the past few months that Europe is more than just bureaucrac­y and economic regulation, that Europe and living together in the European Union have something to do with war and peace, that the decades of peace after World War Two would have been completely unthinkabl­e without the European Union,” Merkel said to applause.

Many people in the past had taken the EU and its advantages for granted — such as freedom of speech, freedom of religion and freedom to travel, said Merkel who grew up in communist East Germany.

“You don’t have all this in many parts of the world. And that’s why it is worth fighting for this Europe,” Merkel said.

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