Stabroek News Sunday

Germany’s Greens open to almost all coalitions but price is gay marriage

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BERLIN (Reuters) - Germany’s Greens are open to working with any party except the right-wing Alternativ­e for Germany after a September vote but will list gay marriage as a condition, which could make it tricky to work with Chancellor Angela Merkel’s conservati­ves.

The Greens, which also named climate protection as their price for participat­ing in government, could be a kingmaker in three potential coalitions after the September 24 election, although recent polls have shown their support slipping to between 6.5 and 8 percent after spending much of last year above 10 percent.

At their party congress in a velodrome in Berlin, the roughly 800 Greens delegates declared they would not sign a coalition deal unless it allowed gay marriage, a step up from the civil partnershi­ps Germany has allowed since 2001.

“Unless the discrimina­tion against lesbians and gays on this point ends, you can’t count on our cooperatio­n,” said Greens politician Volker Beck, who proposed the motion.

Delegates also decided to demand that the 20 dirtiest coal-fired power plants close immediatel­y and that no new vehicles with combustion engines be allowed from 2030.

In a speech Katrin Goering-Eckardt, one of the party’s two top candidates, lashed out at US President Donald Trump for abandoning the Paris climate accord, saying he had “climbed into the ring against the earth” and the Greens would “take on this fight”.

As she drew applause, she sent Trump a Tweet featuring a photograph of delegates holding up posters spelling out “climate first” while others held cartoon cut-outs of a red-faced Trump and pictures of a frowning, sweating planet.

Cem Ozdemir, the Greens’ other top candidate, said he and Goering-Eckardt would not sign a coalition agreement that did not lay out the rules of climate protection and added this meant phasing out coal.

A recent poll by Infratest dimap showed 57 percent of Germans think the Greens are not very important as the party’s political rivals now address environmen­tal and climate issues.

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