Gulf News

Merkel looks for historic fourth win

The scale of her probable victory and coalition partner will provide clues to the ramificati­ons of another term

- Special to Gulf News

erman Chancellor Angela Merkel is looking to make history on Sunday with a fourth straight election victory. Should she pull off the win that polls widely forecast, it will cement her status as the most important political leader in Europe with important implicatio­ns, including for Brexit negotiatio­ns, plus the European Union integratio­n project into the 2020s.

Part of the reason surveys suggest Merkel will win relatively comfortabl­y is that the campaign, at least to date, has lacked any significan­t domestic or foreign policy controvers­y, even over migration or terrorism, to put her on the defensive. This is unlike some German campaigns of the past, such as in 2002 when the then German Chancellor Gerhard Schroder’s opposition to the United States-led Iraq war helped power him to a very narrow reelection success.

Instead, Germans are generally contented, right now, seeing themselves as beneficiar­ies of globalisat­ion with unemployme­nt this year the lowest since the reunificat­ion of East and West Germany after the Cold War.

This is underlined in Merkel’s buoyant approval ratings of around 60 per cent — a major achievemen­t given that she has been the leader of the Christian Democratic Union (CDU) since 2000 and Chancellor for a dozen years.

If she serves a full fourth term in coming years, she would match Helmut Kohl’s 16 years of office from 1982 to 1998 and surpass Konrad Adenauer’s record of service from 1949 to 1963 as Germany’s first post-war chancellor. In fact, a full fourth term would see Merkel only sitting behind Otto von Bismarck who served for almost two decades in office from 1871–1890, during a period in which he was a dominant force in European affairs, helping to drive the unificatio­n of Germany.

To put Merkel’s achievemen­t to date into wider internatio­nal perspectiv­e, four French presidents (Jacques Chirac, Nicolas Sarkozy, Francois Hollande and Emmanuel Macron) and the same number of United Kingdom prime ministers (Tony Blair, Gordon Brown, David Cameron and Theresa May) have served during her tenure. And Merkel has also exceeded the previous record of former British prime minister Margaret Thatcher as Europe’s longest-serving female leader which was 11 years.

While it is likely that Merkel’s rightof-centre CDU will win on Sunday, the exact balance of power in the new Bundestag, the country’s 598-seat parliament, is unclear with some 42 parties standing. The Social Democrats had been hoping to make very significan­t gains in the elections. Yet, the party’s campaign, which has centred around economic inequality and the increased poverty rate in Germany, has failed to catch the public mood.

Beyond the ruling CDU-CSU and Social Democrats, four other parties (up from two in the current Bundestag) are expected to secure seats in the Bundestag, which requires them to secure at least 5 per cent of the vote on Sunday. They are the Green Party, the liberal-oriented Free Democrats, the far-left Die Linke, and far-right Alternativ­e for Germany.

While polls indicate Alternativ­e for Germany will win its first-ever seats in the Bundesrat, it hasn’t made as much electoral headway as some had anticipate­d in 2015 and 2016 it might do. After Sunday’s election, coalition talks could last weeks, especially if there is to be a continuati­on of the grand coalition. It took 86 days after the 2013 ballot before the CDU-CSU reached a deal with the Social Democrats.

Compositio­n of coalition

The nature of the coalition will matter for internatio­nal politics, as well as domestic policy. This is not just because of Merkel’s influence and skills, but also because Germany is the continent’s most populous country and largest economy with its influence likely to grow significan­tly post-Brexit, especially if ties become even stronger with France under Macron.

The importance of the compositio­n of the coalition, internatio­nally, is highlighte­d, for instance, by the fact that some in the UK Government believe that a CDUCSU combinatio­n with the pro-business FDP would mean Germany adopting a more sympatheti­c position towards London in Brexit negotiatio­ns.

Meanwhile, a CDU-CSU grand coalition with the Social Democrats (which is led by former president of the European Parliament, Martin Schultz) is not perceived to be as welcoming to UK decision-makers on Brexit, and also could be a big stimulus to further EU integratio­n in areas from defence and security policy to deepening of the Eurozone, although Berlin under Merkel will likely continue to emphasise fiscal discipline and reject eurobonds or other forms of common debt.

Taken overall, Europe and the wider world are assessing the internatio­nal ramificati­ons of a fourth term for Merkel. While this will see much policy continuity, the precise implicatio­ns will not be clear until the scale of her probable win is clear, and also who she forms her next coalition with.

Andrew Hammond is an Associate at LSE IDEAS at the London School of Economics.

 ?? Niño Jose Heredia/©Gulf News ??
Niño Jose Heredia/©Gulf News

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