Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

Half of Germany wants polls after coalition talks fail

- Reuters

MERKEL COULD BENEFIT FROM A WISH FOR STABILITY IN A NEW POLL, BUT VOTERS COULD TURN AGAINST HER, BOOSTING THE RIGHTWING AFD PARTY.

BERLIN: Half of Germans are in favour of calling a new election after Chancellor Angela Merkel failed to reach a deal to form a new coalition with two other parties, while a fifth back forming a minority government, an opinion poll showed on Wednesday.

The poll, conducted by INSA for the Bild daily, showed 49.9% favouring another election.

It also showed 48.5% think the centre-left Social Democrats (SPD) are right to rule out joining a new “grand coalition” with Merkel’s conservati­ves, which only 18% would favour. The SPD lost ground in the September election after sharing power with Merkel for the last four years.

The collapse of talks between Merkel’s conservati­ve bloc, the pro-business Free Democrats (FDP) and environmen­talist Greens has thrown Germany into political uncertaint­y and raised the prospect of new elections.

The poll showed that 28% blame FDP leader Christian Lindner for the failure of the talks, followed by 27%, who blame Merkel, while 13% blame Greens leader Cem Ozdemir.

Four out of 10 people polled say Merkel should run again as chancellor if new elections are called, while 24% would prefer another candidate for her Christian Democrats (CDU), although there is little consensus on who that should be.

The poll showed that most voters would prefer a coalition between the CDU and FDP after new elections, followed by a coalition between SPD, Greens and the left-wing Linke.

However, the poll showed that a new election would bring little change to the results of the September vote, with the CDU down slightly on 30%, the SPD steady on 21%, the Greens on 10% and the FDP on 11%.

That would still mean that the only possible coalitions with a majority would be between the CDU and the SPD or between the CDU, FDP and Greens.

 ?? AP ?? German Chancellor Angela Merkel in Berlin.
AP German Chancellor Angela Merkel in Berlin.

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