Confidence grows for deal on new German Chancellor Merkel’s government

Although Chancellor Angela Merkel’s Christian Democrats came out on top during the general election in September, they failed to secure a ruling majority, leading to the longest coalition negotiations in postwar history. (Reuters)

BERLIN: Talks between the top German parties on forming a new government for Chancellor Angela Merkel’s fourth term spilled into overtime Monday but confidence appeared to be growing they would strike a deal.
Marathon weekend negotiations failed to yield the desired breakthrough on all outstanding differences. However both sides appeared upbeat about the chance for an agreement by a self-imposed Tuesday deadline.
“We’ve reached the point where we can get a good outcome,” conservative Armin Laschet, premier of Germany’s most populous state North Rhine-Westphalia, told public broadcaster ARD.
“I am very confident that we’ll reach a deal” on Monday, Justice Minister Heiko Maas of the Social Democrats (SPD) told the same program.
The parties are set to return to the negotiating table at 10:00am (0900 GMT).
Europe’s top economic power has been locked in political limbo since an inconclusive general election in September.
Although Merkel’s Christian Democrats came out on top, they failed to secure a ruling majority, leading to the longest coalition negotiations in postwar history.
The Social Democrats, the country’s second-largest party, have served under Merkel in a right-left “grand coalition” for two of her three terms since 2005.
But governing in her shadow has cost them vital support and they scored a historic low 20.5 percent in the September poll.
Their leader Martin Schulz had initially ruled out working with her in the next four years, preferring to sharpen the SPD’s profile in opposition.
Merkel at first turned to two smaller parties, the Free Democrats and Greens, to form a new government.
But when those talks collapsed in acrimony in November, she had to once more woo a reluctant SPD for a new pact.
The SPD has sought to drive up the price for a new deal, which it must still sell to its 440,000 members who will vote on the pact in a yes-or-no referendum.
That vote is expected to be tight, with leaders aiming to have a government in place by the end of March.
Both main parties reached a breakthrough deal in January when they presented an in-principle agreement to start formal coalition talks.
But the final round of negotiations has thrown up several sticking points.
SPD demands to shift temporary workers to permanent contracts, and to make Germany’s health insurance system fairer have run into strong conservative opposition.
“You see in the areas where we still far apart that we are very different parties and that we come from very different fundamental beliefs,” Family Affairs Minister Katarina Barley of the SPD told public radio.
She said she was nevertheless hopeful of an agreement, but noted: “as long as we have not reached the finish line, the deal is not sealed.”
News website Spiegel Online said the protracted negotiations were in part theater for the SPD leadership to show its rank-and-file “we’re fighting for you.”
At stake for Merkel is whether she leads a stable coalition into her fourth term, or risks a fragile minority government or new elections.
Both sides hope to avoid going back to the polls, amid fears the protracted gridlock could strengthen the far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD).
The anti-immigration, anti-Islam party has seized on public fears over the arrival of more than one million migrants and refugees since 2015.
If the “grand coalition” comes together, the AfD will become the biggest opposition party in the Bundestag lower house of parliament.
Meanwhile polls indicate German voters are growing increasingly impatient with the stalemate in Berlin.
ARD television reported that 71 percent of Germans do not understand “why forming a government is taking so long.”