Los Angeles Times

Merkel seals government deal

German leader gives key Cabinet posts to a junior party in order to form a coalition.

- By Erik Kirschbaum Kirschbaum is a special correspond­ent.

BERLIN — German Chancellor Angela Merkel on Wednesday made major concession­s to a junior political party, including giving up control of key ministries, to reach an agreement for a proposed new coalition government that would end months of uncertaint­y.

The agreement, coming nearly five months after the Sept. 24 election put Merkel on track for a fourth term as chancellor, calls for the center-left Social Democratic Party to hold the vice chancellor­ship and several Cabinet posts, including the coveted finance and foreign berths.

The deal is subject to a postal vote by 460,000 registered members of the Social Democratic Party — many of them with a deep aversion to Merkel and her conservati­ve Christian Democratic Union party. The results are expected by March 4.

Merkel, whose party won the largest share of votes in September but fell far short of a majority in Parliament, appeared willing to give the Social Democrats almost everything the party demanded to end the longest period of political limbo in the country’s postwar history. Germany boasts Europe’s biggest economy.

Merkel said at a news conference that negotiatin­g the conditions for the coalition government was a long but worthwhile journey.

“We’ve got a basis for a good and stable government, which our country needs and that many around the world expect from us,” said Merkel, who has been chancellor for 12 years.

The Christian Democrats and the Social Democrats have been the nation’s dominant parties since the late 1940s.

The left wing of the Social Democrats and its powerful youth organizati­on, the Jusos, however, have been campaignin­g hard against another “grand coalition” as junior partners to Merkel after the party posted its worst postwar result: 20% of the vote in September.

Merkel’s conservati­ves were also battered in the election, falling to 33% of the vote in part because of voter frustratio­n over her 2015 decision to open the country’s borders to more than a million refugees from Syria, Afghanista­n, Iraq and other trouble spots.

Merkel gave the Social Democratic Party, or SPD, much of what it wanted probably because she feared grass-roots members would vote against a deal and and plunge Germany into a prolonged period of uncertaint­y with new elections, political leaders and analysts said.

“You can see the SPD’s signature quite clearly in this agreement,” said party Chairman Martin Schulz, who will become the country’s next foreign minister if the deal is approved.

Schulz said the 177-page agreement includes plans to increase spending on schools, housing, pensioners and job market reforms that party members like to see.

Germany has been running budget surpluses since 2012 and is expected to post a $35-billion surplus in 2018. But rather than cut taxes, the agreement indicates the government would increase spending by about $60 billion over the next four years — much of that on projects the Social Democrats favor.

The unusual turmoil in Germany after decades of political stability in a threeor four-party Parliament was caused at least in part by the rise of the upstart farright Alternativ­e for Germany party, which won 92 seats in the 709-seat Parliament in September’s election.

Alternativ­e for Germany showed surprising strength, and its campaign aimed against foreigners and refugees made it difficult for the other parties to form a majority. Merkel ruled out a minority government, in part because of lingering fears over political instabilit­y in the 1930s that led to the rise of Adolf Hitler and the Third Reich.

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