The Herald (South Africa)

Germany’s SPD at odds over coalition

- Michelle Fitzpatric­k

LEADING members of Germany’s Social Democrats voiced scepticism yesterday over a preliminar­y coalition agreement reached with Chancellor Angela Merkel’s conservati­ves, days after the hard-fought deal was hailed as a breakthrou­gh.

Berlin’s SPD mayor Michael Mueller said he was very critical about entering into another government with Merkel’s CDU/CSU bloc after all three parties slumped to their worst results in decades in September’s election.

“The same coalition with the same policies is not the right answer,” the centre-left politician told the Tagesspieg­el daily, calling for further talks to win more concession­s on key SPD demands.

Party leaders on Friday announced after tortuous negotiatio­ns that they had signed off on a policy blueprint paving the way for formal coalition discussion­s to begin after months of paralysis in Europe’s top economy.

In the 28-page document, the parties agreed to join France in a push to strengthen and reform the eurozone, to limit the influx of asylum seekers to Germany to about 200 000 a year, and to refrain from tax hikes.

But Mueller lamented the SPD’s failure to secure a tax hike for the rich or a restructur­ing of the country’s two-tier healthcare system.

Those concerns were echoed by the SPD’s Malu Dreyer, premier of Rhineland-Palatinate state, who also slammed the compromise to cap immigratio­n.

The migration stance outlined in the roadmap was very difficult for the SPD, she told the German newspaper group Funke Mediengrup­pe.

The criticism will make for uncomforta­ble reading for SPD chief Martin Schulz, who has promised to give party members the last word on a third stint as Merkel’s junior coalition partner.

In a sign of the difficulti­es ahead, SPD delegates at a regional party conference in Saxony-Anhalt on Saturday narrowly voted against starting formal coalition talks.

The stakes will be higher next Saturday, when 600 party delegates will be asked to give the green light at a congress, followed by a final vote by more than 400 000 rank-and-file members. – AFP

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ANGELA MERKEL

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