Gulf News

SPD has ‘no Plan B’ to Merkel coalition

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Support for Germany’s Social Democrats (SPD) hit a record low, a poll showed, and the party’s leader-in-waiting said she had “no Plan B” should members reject a coalition deal with Angela Merkel’s conservati­ves.

The SPD’s 464,000 members vote in a postal ballot beginning on Tuesday on whether the centre-left party should go ahead with the agreement its leaders clinched last week to renew their power-sharing alliance with the chancellor’s CDU/CSU bloc.

“I am convinced we will get a majority,” Andrea Nahles, who senior SPD officials this week endorsed as the party’s future leader, told Der Spiegel magazine in comments published yesterday. “I don’t have a Plan B.”

Nahles made the comments after a survey conducted by pollster Infratest dimap from February 13 to 15 showed support for the SPD fell to 16 per cent, an all-time low and just one percentage point ahead of the far-right Alternativ­e for Germany (AfD).

The SPD has slid further into disarray since its leaders struck the coalition deal, blighted by bitter divisions over whether to team up again with Merkel, a loss of confidence in outgoing leader Martin Schulz and discontent over the succession process. “The past days were very difficult, that is true, and that is reflected in such numbers,” said Nahles. “But I am very hopeful we can that we can now start moving forward.”

The turmoil in the SPD has led to calls from some politician­s in Merkel’s conservati­ve bloc to drop the coalition plan and form a minority government instead. On Tuesday, the SPD appointed Hamburg mayor Olaf Scholz as interim leader and recommende­d Nahles as Schulz’s longer-term successor. Nahles has campaigned for a re-run of the coalition that has been in power since 2013, and last month helped secure party delegates’ backing for the negotiatio­ns.

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