Orlando Sentinel

Hurdle remains after Merkel clinches German coalition deal

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BERLIN — Chancellor Angela Merkel finally reached a deal Wednesday to form a new German coalition government, handing the powerful Finance Ministry to the country’s main center-left party in an agreement aimed at ending months of political gridlock.

The center-left Social Democrats’ leaders now have one last major hurdle to overcome — winning their skeptical members’ approval of the deal.

Merkel’s conservati­ve Christian Democratic Union, its Bavaria-only sister, the Christian Social Union, and the center-left Social Democrats agreed after a grueling final 24 hours of negotiatio­ns on a 177-page deal that promises “a new awakening for Europe.”

“I know that millions of citizens have been watching us closely on this long road over recent weeks,” Merkel said. “They had two justified demands of us: First, finally form a government — a stable government — and second, think of people’s real needs and interests.”

The coalition deal could be “the foundation of a good and stable government, which our country needs and many in the world expect of us,” she added.

Germany has already broken its post-World War II record for the longest time between its last election on Sept. 24 to the swearing-in of a new government. That is still at least several weeks away.

Merkel currently leads a caretaker government, which isn’t in a position to launch major initiative­s or play any significan­t role in the debate on the European Union’s future, led so far by French President Emmanuel Macron.

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