Bangkok Post

Conservati­ves urge SPD to get a move on

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BERLIN: A leading member of Chancellor Angela Merkel’s conservati­ves has urged Social Democrats (SPD) to finish coalition talks within two to three weeks, warning that Germans were losing trust in democracy after months without a new government.

Volker Kauder, who leads conservati­ves in parliament, rejected calls by Martin Schulz, the embattled leader of the centreleft SPD, for revisiting key issues already agreed in a coalition blueprint.

Mr Schulz met with Ms Merkel and the leader of the Bavarian CSU conservati­ves, Horst Seehofer, on Monday evening for what party sources called “constructi­ve” discusions about the way forward on building a new government.

The political blocs are due to meet separately before formal coalition negotiatio­ns, which could start later this week. Failure to reach agreement on a coalition could result in a minority government or new elections.

“We should finish the coalition negotiatio­ns in two to three weeks,” Mr Kauder told the Funke Mediengrup­pe newspaper chain in an interview published yesterday. “The citizens are tired of waiting.

Every day that passes without a new government does not exactly increase trust in the parties and democracy.”

A weary Mr Schulz, whose leadership was in play on Sunday, told reporters on Monday that he aimed to build a government that “improved the lives of the people in this country, but also meets Germany’s internatio­nal commitment­s, especially with regard to the [European Union] and the unity of Europe.”

Earlier, he said negotiator­s “will talk about all the topics we addressed in the explorator­y talks again”.

Conservati­ves reject a wholesale re-look at the blueprint, arguing that it would delay and complicate the negotiatio­ns.

“We shouldn’t even talk about improvemen­ts. The blueprint is the basis for a coalition,” Mr Kauder told the Funke group.

Only 56% of SPD delegates at party congress on Sunday voted to launch formal coalition on the basis of that blueprint.

The narrow victory margin — and continued opposition by the party’s youth wing — puts pressure on Mr Schulz to secure further concession­s from conservati­ves on immigratio­n and healthcare, something that conservati­ves have rejected thus far.

The SPD had wanted to go into opposition instead of redoing the tie-up that ruled Germany the past four years after gaining just 20.5% of the vote in September national elections, the worst result for Germany’s oldest party since 1933.

A new RTL poll conducted on Monday showed the party’s support had dropped a point to 17%, just four points ahead of the Alternativ­e for Germany (AfD).

 ??  ?? Kauder: Citizens are tired of waiting
Kauder: Citizens are tired of waiting

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