Arab News

Germany’s top parties ‘reach deal’ on Merkel coalition

It ends 4 months of political standstill in Europe’s top economy

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BERLIN: Chancellor Angela Merkel’s conservati­ves and the Social Democrats sealed a deal on Wednesday on a new coalition, officials close to the talks said, potentiall­y ending four months of political standstill in Europe’s top economy.

The sources told AFP the parties had ironed out their final difference­s and were ready to sign an agreement for Merkel’s fourth term.

Public broadcaste­r ARD said the final disputes had centered around “ministry remits and personnel questions.”

The breakthrou­gh will come as a relief to Germany’s EU partners as the bloc faces tough negotiatio­ns on migration and Brexit.

Merkel, Europe’s most experience­d leader, has seen her standing at home and abroad weakened by the longest stretch of coalitionb­uilding in the country’s postwar history.

But before she can be sworn in, a final hurdle looms: The hard-fought pact between her CDU/CSU bloc and the Social Democratic Party must still be approved by the SPD’s skeptical rank-and-file .

The agreement for a renewed “grand coalition” comes after days of marathon talks in which negotiator­s from all three parties haggled over everything from foreign policy to labor issues and health care.

Germany has been stuck in political limbo since September’s inconclusi­ve general election saw mainstream parties bleed support to the far-right AfD, which tapped into anger over Merkel’s liberal refugee policy.

Merkel, in power for over 12 years, at first tried to cobble together a novel three-way coalition with the Greens and the liberal Free Democrats, but those efforts collapsed in November.

Faced with snap elections that could further boost the AfD or the prospect of heading an unstable minority government, she opted to woo back the SPD — her junior partner for two of her three terms since 2005.

SPD leader Martin Schulz then abandoned his post-election vow to renew the party in opposition — a U-turn that angered many.

Merkel’s fate now lies in the hands of the SPD, as Schulz has promised to give his party’s 460,000 members the final say on whether to accept the coalition pact.

 ??  ?? German Chancellor Angela Merkel, center, with two of the Horst Seehofer, the CSU leader, left, and Martin Schulz, the CDU leader, after talks to form a new government at the SPD headquarte­rs in Berlin. (AFP/file)
German Chancellor Angela Merkel, center, with two of the Horst Seehofer, the CSU leader, left, and Martin Schulz, the CDU leader, after talks to form a new government at the SPD headquarte­rs in Berlin. (AFP/file)

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