The New Zealand Herald

Dog has his day in coalition vote

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Justin Huggler

in Berlin A dog from Spain named Lima is to get a say in whether Angela Merkel can form a new Government in Germany.

The dog was signed up as a member of the centre-left Social Democratic Party (SPD), which is holding a ballot on whether to join a new coalition under Merkel.

Germany’s biggest-selling newspaper, Bild, has admitted it tricked the SPD into signing Lima up in order to test the party’s identity checking procedures.

The party failed to detect the ploy, and Lima was accepted as a member. It was sent a postal ballot form to vote on the coalition deal as well as campaign leaflets from rival camps.

The debacle is the latest in a series of humiliatio­ns for the SPD, and came a day after an opinion poll found its support had fallen so low it is now in third place behind the nationalis­t Alternativ­e for Germany party (AfD).

The findings mean the SPD’s place as one of the two main parties in Germany is under threat for the first time since World War II.

The SPD is currently holding a postal ballot of its 463,723 members on a coalition pact with Merkel. But the party is in chaos, riven by infighting over the deal.

Martin Schulz, its former leader, was forced to resign after losing the confidence of members.

The disarray has seen support for the SPD plummet, with a poll for the Insa Institute this week finding it had dropped to an all-time low of 15.5 per cent, behind the AfD, which moved into second place on 16 per cent.

Merkel’s Christian Democrats (CDU) are still comfortabl­y in first place, on 32 per cent, but she needs the SPD’s support to form a new Government.

A militant campaign by opponents of the deal within the SPD, to sign up new members to vote No, recruited about 24,000 people before a deadline earlier this month. But that has now been undercut by the disclosure that one of them was a dog.

 ??  ?? Angela Merkel
Angela Merkel

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