The Manila Times

Merkel quells party rebellion

- AFP

BERLIN: German Chancellor Angela Merkel will put a hard-fought coalition deal to a vote on Monday by her conservati­ve party, which is expected to give its approval after she moved to quash a rightwing rebellion.

- tian Democratic Union (CDU), the party she has led for nearly 18 years and steadily moved towards the political center, are gathering from 0900 GMT in Berlin.

The main aim of the meeting is to give the green light to a government pact hammered out in early February with the Social Democrats (SPD) after four months of political limbo in Europe’s economic powerhouse since a tricky general election.

Merkel paid a high price to break the impasse and coax the reluctant SPD back into a loveless “grand coalition,” which has ruled Germany for eight of her 12 years in power.

The deal included the CDU ceding control to the Social Democrats of the powerful finance ministry, seen by conservati­ves as a guarantor of budgetary rigor in Germany and the eurozone.

Merkel, once the seemingly invincible leader of her party and the nation, has looked severely weakened in recent months given her protracted struggle to put together a viable coalition for her

Opponents of her liberal refugee policy have grown more outspoken as the country’s major parties face pressure from the far- right AfD party which has railed against million asylum seekers since 2015.

To tamp down the rumblings, Merkel moved on Sunday to coopt one of her most outspoken CDU critics by bringing him into her next cabinet as health minister.

‘Something good for Germany’

Jens Spahn, 37, a former deputy to hardliner Wolfgang Schaeuble at - ly slammed Merkel’s centrist policies, particular­ly on immigratio­n.

He has also advocated a sharp conservati­ve shift in a bid to woo back voters from the AfD, which garnered nearly 13 percent in the September election.

Announcing the new line-up, Merkel called Spahn “a representa­tive of the younger generation” who she was convinced would play a constructi­ve role.

“People sometimes make critical comments—Jens Spahn is not the only one and that’s OK,” she said.

“Neverthele­ss we have the task to do something good for Germany and that’s what he wants to do, just like all the other cabinet members.”

Merkel filled the remaining CDU ministries with loyalists, keeping Ursula von der Leyen at the defense ministry, putting close ally Peter Altmaier on the economic affairs brief and placing Julia Kloeckner in the agricultur­e job.

Two relatively obscure CDU politician­s, Anja Karliczek and Helge Braun, are to take the education and chief-of-staff briefs respective­ly, said Merkel, noting that at 63 she will be the oldest member of the government.

The cabinet picks “are future-ori- ented—they bring together experience with new faces in a good mix,” Merkel said, but admitted it had required some “painful” choices.

Faced with calls to “renew” the party, Merkel last week tapped the popular female premier of Germany’s tiny Saarland state to take over as CDU general secretary, fuelling speculatio­n the veteran chancellor is lining up her successor.

Annegret Kramp-Karrenbaue­r, dubbed “mini-Merkel” by German media, is expected to be formally appointed at Monday’s meeting.

A staunch Catholic who despite her centrist stance has also advocated a tougher line on migration, Kramp- Karrenbaue­r was also seen as a wise choice to soothe internal discontent.

Carsten Linnemann, a Merkel skeptic in the party, welcomed the personnel choices but said it must go along with a return to conservati­sm.

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