Khaleej Times

Merkel vows swift return to govt work

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berlin — German Chancellor Angela Merkel promised on Monday that her new government would start work swiftly and lend a strong voice to Europe, a day after she secured a coalition for her fourth term.

Germany’s second biggest party, the Social Democrats (SPD), on Sunday finally gave the all-clear to renew their partnershi­p with Merkel’s conservati­ves, ending a political impasse that had plagued the country since September’s inconclusi­ve election.

“Almost six months after the election, the people expect something to happen now,” Merkel said in a brief statement.

“We see that ... Europe faces challenges and that a strong voice from Germany, along with that of France and other member states, is necessary,” she said, pointing to a litany of issues ranging from world trade to the war in Syria.

All that “requires us to begin work quickly in the government”, said the veteran leader.

European partners had been anxiously watching as the leader of the EU’s biggest economy struggled to find partners to govern with since September.

But just as Germany finally emerged from paralysis, another European heavyweigh­t, Italy, sank into potential political limbo.

And just as in Germany, Italy’s election campaign was dominated by anger against immigratio­n, with early results suggesting a surge for populist and far-right parties.

Both Merkel’s conservati­ves and the centre-left SPD had taken a hammering at the ballot box as many Germans frustrated about the arrival of more than a million asylum seekers in Germany since 2015 voted for the far-right Alternativ­e for Germany (AfD).

The AfD, taking aim at the two mainstream parties’ decision to renew their partnershi­p, predicted that “the bill will come at the latest in 2021”, when Germans are again due to go to the polls.

The far-right party, which garnered nearly 13 per cent in the September election, also vowed to go after Merkel’s CDU over its “continuati­on of the immigratio­n policy without imposing a limit”.

The presence of the AfD has shaken up the Bundestag, as the anti-immigratio­n group’s lawmakers challenge post-war Germany’s culture of remembranc­e of the Nazi era and fuel heated debates on national identity. Wary of ceding further ground to the Islamophob­ic protest party, Merkel’s conservati­ves and the SPD have recognised that “more of the same” will not suffice.

They have also agreed to review their cooperatio­n in two years.

The joyless partnershi­p was evident in the sombre faces of leading SPD members Sunday when they announced that their card-carrying members had signed off on their plan to again join Merkel in government.

The Frankfurte­r Allgemeine Zeitung daily questioned how long the pact would last. “This government has a lengthy to-do list but lacks imaginatio­n — that’s the public’s perception,” it noted.

For now, Merkel is hanging on and is due to be re-elected as chancellor by parliament on March 14 as President Frank-Walter Steinmeier, according to procedure, on Monday nominated her for the post.

Merkel, who has governed for 12 years, is heading into her fourth term weakened, with her party baying for renewal.

 ?? AP ?? German Chancellor Angela Merkel, addresses the media at the party headquarte­rs in Berlin on Monday. —
AP German Chancellor Angela Merkel, addresses the media at the party headquarte­rs in Berlin on Monday. —

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