The Daily Telegraph

Grand coalition our best hope, sister party tells Merkel

Chancellor urged to join forces again with Social Democrats, as Youth Union gives Christmas deadline

- By Abby Young-powell in Berlin

HOPES were raised for an end to Germany’s political impasse yesterday as Horst Seehofer, leader of Chancellor Angela Merkel’s sister CSU party, said a renewed grand coalition was “the best option” for the country. In a difficult week, Mrs Merkel fought to save her political career and avoid snap elections, after negotiatio­ns between her Christian Democrats (CDU) and smaller parties broke down more than four weeks after they began.

The Social Democrats (SPD) had previously ruled out entering into another “grand coalition” with Mrs Merkel, after it suffered its worst ever result in the elections in September.

However Martin Schulz, leader of the SPD, back-pedalled and offered Mrs Merkel talks on Friday. “An alliance between the conservati­ves and the SPD is the best option for Germany, better in any case than ‘Jamaica’, new elections, or a minority government,” Mr Seehofer told the Bild am Sonntag newspaper yesterday.

The “Jamaica coalition” would involve the CDU, Free Democrats and Greens, whose party colours match those of the Jamaican flag.

Referring to the previous grand coalition, Mrs Merkel said at a party conference on Saturday: “We did a good job. We worked well together.” Talks with the SPD, which were due to begin yesterday evening, will be based on “mutual respect” and “compromise”, Mrs Merkel said.

The Young Union (JU), the joint youth organisati­on of the two conservati­ve union parties, has said Mrs Merkel, Mr Seehofer and Mr Schulz have until Christmas to form a grand coalition. “If there is no agreement between CDU, CSU and SPD by this time, the negotiatio­ns are to be regarded as failed,” it decided on Saturday, according to

Bild am Sonntag. Paul Ziemiak, the head of the JU – which wields clout over the parties and claims to be the largest youth political organisati­on in Europe, with around 120,000 members – told the Bild newspaper: “If the SPD does not agree, the union must seek a minority government.”

The German public are also apparently in favour of such a coalition, with 52 per cent saying they would like a repeat, according to an Emnid survey for

Bild. Failed talks between the conservati­ve union parties, the pro-business Free Democrats (FDP) and the Leftleanin­g Greens broke down when the FDP stormed out of discussion­s last week, citing irreconcil­able difference­s.

But Mrs Merkel said on Saturday that she is determined to get a new government in place as soon as possible to avoid fresh elections, which she fears could strengthen the far-right Alternativ­e for Germany (AFD) party.

AFD has claimed credit for the political turmoil, which has left Mrs Merkel’s authority diminished and created instabilit­y in Europe’s largest economy.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom