China Daily

Merkel defends coalition deal against party criticism

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BERLIN — German Chancellor Angela Merkel pushed back on Sunday against critics within her Christian Democratic Union party of the governing coalition deal reached with Germany’s main centerleft party.

Merkel’s conservati­ve bloc secured an agreement to form a new coalition government with the Social Democrats on Wednesday, ending months of political gridlock.

The chancellor acknowledg­ed in a Sunday interview with ZDF public television that it “was painful” to hand the powerful finance ministry to the Social Democrats.

“We sure did pay a price for a stable government,” Merkel said.

But she added that it would have been “irresponsi­ble” to have allowed the negotiatio­ns on a coalition to collapse.

The deal to end Germany’s four-month, postelecti­on political impasse would see Chancellor Angela Merkel’s conservati­ve party and its Bavaria-only sister party, the Christian Social Union, continue their “grand coalition” of the last four years with the Angela Merkel, German Chancellor center-left Party.

The last major hurdle is winning approval from the Social Democrats’ skeptical members, who will vote on the Social Democratic agreement.

The Social Democrats are widely viewed to have secured a good deal in the coalition negotiatio­ns, emerging with control of the finance ministry, the foreign and labor ministries and three other ministries it already led.

Several prominent members of Merkel’s party have criticized the chancellor in recent days for handing too many ministries to the Social Democrats.

Jens Spahn, a leading CDU party board member, told Austria’s Presse am Sonntag newspaper that the loss of the finance ministry was “was a tough blow”.

Others called for a renewal of the Christian Democrat leadership, a barely disguised push for Merkel’s replacemen­t.

The governor of SchleswigH­olstein state, Daniel Guenther, said earlier in daily Die Welt that “we need new faces” in the Cabinet.

However, Merkel, who has led Germany since 2005, said she plans to run the country as chancellor for the full fouryear term.

“These four years are what I promised,” she said. “I belong to those people who keep their promises.”

Merkel also said she wanted a younger generation to fill ministeria­l posts in the coalition.

“And now we need to show that we can start with a new team,” she said. “We have six ministeria­l posts to fill and from my point of view we need to ensure that not only the over-60s are considered but also younger people.”

These four years are what I promised. I belong to those people who keep their promises.”

 ?? RODRIGO GARRIDO / REUTERS ?? Mario Jarrin of Ecuador competes in a mountain bike race in Valparaiso, Chile, on Sunday.
RODRIGO GARRIDO / REUTERS Mario Jarrin of Ecuador competes in a mountain bike race in Valparaiso, Chile, on Sunday.
 ?? PAUL ZINKEN / DPA VIA ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? German Chancellor Angela Merkel arrives for the recording of an interview at the public-service broadcaste­r ZDF in Berlin, on Sunday.
PAUL ZINKEN / DPA VIA ASSOCIATED PRESS German Chancellor Angela Merkel arrives for the recording of an interview at the public-service broadcaste­r ZDF in Berlin, on Sunday.

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