The Daily Telegraph

Merkel rescued by the opposition as SPD leader ends refusal to enter coalition talks

- By Justin Huggler in Berlin

ANGELA MERKEL appeared to have staged one of the great political escapes yesterday after a rival party agreed to end the crisis in Germany by opening talks on forming a new government.

Martin Schulz, the leader of the Social Democrats (SPD), said his party had agreed to end its refusal to enter talks with Mrs Merkel after a “dramatic” personal appeal from Frank-walter Steinmeier, the German President.

“We do not have a government crisis, but Germany is in a complicate­d situation,” Mr Schulz said. “The President made a dramatic appeal to the parties to speak again, because we cannot go straight to new elections… The SPD is aware of its responsibi­lity for Germany and for Europe.”

Germany was facing the prospect of new elections after coalition talks between Mrs Merkel’s Christian Democrats (CDU) and smaller parties collapsed last week. The SPD, her former coalition partner, will now open talks with Mrs Merkel.

Mr Schulz said the party has not decided whether it is ready to enter a new coalition with Mrs Merkel, or will only offer to prop up a minority government from the outside. He pledged that any final decision will be put to the full party membership in a vote. “If the discussion­s result in us taking part in a government in any shape or form, the members will vote on it,” he said.

Although Mr Schulz painted the move to open talks as a response to President Steinmeier’s appeal, he was facing the possibilit­y of a leadership challenge over his refusal to open talks with Mrs Merkel. The depth of division in his party was made clear by marathon internal discussion­s which went on for eight hours and did not end until the early hours of the morning.

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