Cape Argus

Merkel warns coalition against internal wrangles

- GEIR MOULSON

GERMAN Chancellor Angela Merkel said yesterday it was time for her coalition government to stop getting bogged down in internal squabbles, after its leaders reached a deal to resolve its second major crisis in just three months.

Merkel said she regretted the handling of the latest dispute, over the future of Germany’s domestic intelligen­ce chief, and called for Germany’s biggest parties to move on from political infighting.

“It is all the more important that we now solve people’s problems,” she said. “In many areas we have been too preoccupie­d with ourselves. That must change.”

On Sunday, coalition leaders resolved an increasing­ly farcical standoff over the head of the BfV spy agency, Hans-Georg Maassen. The centre-left Social Democrats had demanded his removal after he appeared to downplay recent far-right violence against migrants in the eastern city of Chemnitz.

Coalition leaders initially agreed last week to remove Maassen from his current job and make him a deputy interior minister – giving him a promotion and a hefty pay rise. Their decision unleashed a backlash that prompted the Social Democrats’ leader, Andrea Nahles, to demand its renegotiat­ion.

Maassen will now become a “special adviser” to Interior Minister Horst Seehofer, who has backed the official and refused to dismiss him, but won’t be promoted or get a raise.

The saga has further battered the image of the coalition of Merkel’s conservati­ve Christian Democratic Union, Seehofer’s Bavaria-only Christian Social Union and the Social Democrats, which took office only in March but has already been through one near-death experience over an apparently minor issue.

It has highlighte­d personal and political tensions in an alliance that took six months to negotiate and appears short on both trust and energy. In last year’s election, all three governing parties lost support and the farright Alternativ­e for Germany entered parliament.

In June, the coalition tottered as Merkel and Seehofer – a conservati­ve ally but a persistent critic of her initially welcoming approach to large numbers of migrants in 2015 – sparred for weeks over whether to turn back small numbers of asylum-seekers at the German-Austrian border.

Merkel conceded yesterday that the initial deal on Maassen “wasn’t convincing”, saying she had been thinking too much about organisati­onal details “but too little about how people rightly feel when they hear about a promotion”.

“I regret very much that this could happen,” she told reporters in Berlin,.

Merkel said coalition leaders would meet next week to consider “pressing questions”.

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