Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

German government-building talks on

- GEIR MOULSON

BERLIN — German Chancellor Angela Merkel began talks Sunday with the center-left Social Democrats on forming a new government as leaders stressed the need for speed while they attempt to break an impasse more than three months after the country’s election.

Leaders aim to decide by Friday whether there’s enough common ground to move on to formal coalition negotiatio­ns. Whatever the result, it will be a while yet before a new administra­tion is in place to end what is already post-World War II Germany’s longest effort to put together a new government.

Germany’s Sept. 24 election produced a parliament­ary majority for only two plausible coalitions: the outgoing alliance of Merkel’s conservati­ve Christian Democratic Union and its Bavaria-only sister, the Christian Social Union, with the Social Democrats; or an untried combinatio­n of the conservati­ves, the pro-business Free Democrats and the left-leaning Greens. The Social Democrats vowed after slumping to their worst post-war election result to go into opposition, so Merkel opened talks on the alternativ­e coalition — which collapsed in November. The Social Democrats then reluctantl­y reconsider­ed their refusal to mull extending the “grand coalition” of Germany’s biggest parties. Shortly before Christmas, Germany beat its previous record of 86 days — set in 2013 — for the time from an election to the swearing-in of a new government.

If the parties decide this week that they’re prepared to open formal coalition negotiatio­ns, that will require approval Jan. 21 by a congress of the Social Democrats. Party leader Martin Schulz, Merkel’s defeated challenger in September, may face a tough job convincing members who so far are deeply skeptical of being junior partners in another “grand coalition.” Those negotiatio­ns would take weeks. Further, Social Democrat leaders have promised to hold a ballot of the full party membership on any coalition deal — taking several more weeks.

Possible stumbling blocks include migration: the conservati­ves want to maintain a block that bans migrants granted a status short of full asylum from bringing their closest relatives to Germany, while the Social Democrats want to end it. The two sides could also clash over the Social Democrats’ call to overhaul the health insurance system and their differing ambitions for the European

Union. Schulz recently advocated aiming for a federal “United States of Europe” by 2025, which goes too far for conservati­ves.

If the parties don’t form a coalition, the only remaining options would be for Merkel’s conservati­ves to lead an unpreceden­ted minority government, or a new election. Schulz has said some form of support for a minority government is an option for his party, but Merkel has made clear she wants a coalition.

The road to either a minority government or a new election involves President Frank-Walter Steinmeier, who so far has opposed a new vote. The German parliament can’t dissolve itself and Merkel can’t call a confidence vote as a caretaker chancellor. Steinmeier would first have to propose a chancellor to parliament, who must win support from a majority of all lawmakers to be elected. If that fails, parliament has 14 days to elect a candidate of its own choosing, again by an absolute majority. If that also fails, Steinmeier could choose to appoint a candidate who wins the most votes but falls short of a majority — or dissolve parliament. An election would then have to be held within 60 days.

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