Deccan Chronicle

Parties sign coalition deal for new Scholz government

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Berlin, Dec. 7: Germany’s incoming governing parties signed their agreement for what they portray as a progressiv­e coalition on Tuesday, a day before Olaf Scholz is due to succeed longtime leader Angela Merkel as chancellor.

The agreement hammered out last month between Scholz’s centre-left Social Democrats, the environmen­talist Greens and the probusines­s Free Democrats received strong backing over recent days from the three parties’ members.

That has cleared the way for Scholz to be elected on Wednesday in parliament, where the coalition — which has never yet been tried in a national government — has a solid majority.

The 177-page coalition agreement is titled “Venture More Progress” — a theme that the incoming government’s leaders hammered home at a signing ceremony at Berlin’s Futurium museum.

Efforts to curb climate change are a top priority for the new government, particular­ly the Greens. Other priorities include modernisin­g Europe’s biggest economy and introducin­g more liberal social policies.

Above all, though, the government faces the immediate task of pushing down nearrecord Coronaviru­s infection rates. “We said that we want to venture more progress, and from this week on we want to work on progress,” said Christian Lindner, the incoming finance minister and the Free Democrats’ leader.

“We have no illusions — we face great challenges.” The agreement between three parties that had significan­t difference­s before Germany’s September election was reached relatively quickly and, at least in public, in unexpected harmony.

“If the good cooperatio­n that worked while we were forming the government continues to work, it will be a very, very good time for the tasks that lie ahead of us,” Scholz said. He acknowledg­ed that dealing with the pandemic “will demand all our strength and energy”. Merkel, who has been chancellor for 16 years, did not seek a fifth term. Her centrerigh­t Union bloc is going into opposition after its election defeat.

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