German Election Would Further Harm SPD, Schulz Warns
The leader of Germany’s Social Democrats on Friday urged members of his center-left party to endorse coalition talks with Chancellor Angela Merkel’s conservatives or risk facing new elections that could further damage the party.
The SPD is scrambling to rally support among rank-and-file party members for formal negotiations with the conservatives about another “grand coalition” — a move opposed by outspoken members of the party’s youth and left wings.
Nearly four months after a national election, Merkel has still not managed to form a government. Refusal by SPD delegates to hold further talks could lead to new elections or a minority government for the first time in Germany’s post-war era.
Many experts fear that new elections could further strengthen the far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD), which entered parliament for the first time in September.
The process would also further exacerbate uncertainty that has raised questions about the future of Europe’s largest economy and Merkel’s quest for a fourth term in office.
Rejection of the talks “would lead to new elections, and in pretty short order”, SPD leader Martin Schulz told weekly news magazine Der Spiegel. He said the SPD — which posted its worst result since 1933 in September’s election — was likely to see further losses in any new poll.
“If the parties do not succeed in forming a government with the majorities in the Bundestag, then voters will punish them,” he told the magazine.
Schulz also expressed impatience with those who argue that the SPD must reinvent itself in opposition, arguing that it had the power now to improve the lives of everyday Germans.
“I don’t want the geriatric nurse to have to wait four years for better working conditions just so the SPD feels better,” he said.
The leader of the SPD’s youth wing, Kevin Kuehnert, and other opponents of another coalition government, say the blueprint hammered out with conservatives falls too far short of SPD goals.
Schulz and his backers insist the blueprint will benefit German citizens, and dampened hopes that formal coalition talks would result in significantly different results.
“The exploratory talks created a framework for what is possible and what isn‘t,” he said. “After all, we don’t want the other side to question things that we fought for and won.”
A new poll by broadcaster ZDF showed that 64 percent of Germans — and 75 percent of SPD members — expect SPD delegates to approve further talks with Merkel’s conservatives.
The SPD has vowed to leave the final decision on whether to enter government to members in a vote by mail.
The poll showed that only 45 percent of Germans were in favor of another grand coalition, although 68 percent of conservatives were in favor, and 57 percent of SPD members.
Conservatives would win 33 percent if the next election were held on Sunday, the poll showed, up one percentage point from a poll last week. The SPD would win just 20 percent of the vote, down three points from last week.
Source: Reuters
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