Stabroek News Sunday

Germans vote in close election to decide Merkel successor

-

BERLIN, (Reuters) - Germans vote in a national election today that looks too close to call, with the centre-left Social Democrats (SPD) mounting a strong challenge to retiring Chancellor Angela Merkel's conservati­ves.

Merkel has been in power since 2005 but plans to step down after the election, making the vote an erachangin­g event https://reut.rs/3hfDamG to set the future course of Europe's largest economy.

A fractured electorate means that after the election, leading parties will sound each other out before embarking on more formal coalition negotiatio­ns https://reut.rs/2ZeqYw3 that could take months, leaving Merkel, 67, in charge in a caretaker role.

Campaignin­g in his home constituen­cy of Aachen alongside Merkel, conservati­ve candidate Armin Laschet said on Saturday that a leftist alliance led by the SPD with the Greens and the hard-left Linke party would destabilis­e Europe.

"They want to pull us out of NATO, they don't want this alliance, they want another republic," said Laschet, who is 60. "I don't want the Linke to be in the next government."

Running against Laschet is Olaf Scholz of the SPD, the finance minister in Merkel's right-left coalition who won all three televised debates between the leading candidates.

Scholz, 63, has not ruled out a leftist alliance with The Left but said NATO membership was a red line for the SPD. After a domestic-focused election campaign, Berlin's allies in Europe and beyond may have to wait for months before they can see whether the new German government is ready to engage on foreign issues to the extent they would like.

The splintered political landscape means a three-way coalition is likely. Final opinion polls gave the Social Democrats a narrow lead, but the conservati­ves have reduced the gap in recent days and many voters were still undecided.

The most likely coalition scenarios see either the SPD or the conservati­ve CDU/CSU bloc - whoever comes first - forming an alliance with the Greens and the liberal Free Democrats (FDP).

Scholz told supporters in his own constituen­cy in Potsdam near Berlin that he was still hoping the SPD and Greens would secure a majority to rule alone without a third partner.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Guyana