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Europe
Merkel, Schroeder Vie for Power in Germany
2005-09-20
Germany's opposition leader Angela Merkel and the chairman of Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder's party made their first contacts with potential coalition partners Monday in a scramble for power after the country's inconclusive election. Voters denied both Schroeder and Merkel a majority, but each is demanding the chancellor's office. Their struggle could last weeks, even as business leaders and economists warn decisive action is needed to invigorate the sluggish economy.

Germany's foreign policy — addressing such issues as Turkey's bid for European Union membership, Iran's nuclear program and U.S. relations — also remains on hold. "Germany is paralyzed at the worst time for European diplomacy," said leading French foreign affairs analyst Dominique Moisi. On Iraq and in dealings with China and Russia, Washington officials "were looking for a stronger, more united, cooperative Europe. Obviously, they are not going to have it."

Merkel's conservative Christian Democrats and their Bavarian sister party just barely beat Schroeder's Social Democrats 35.2 percent to 34.3 percent. The muddled result could lead left and right to link up in a so-called grand coalition. But either Merkel or Schroeder would have to yield the chancellorship, and many fear such a merger would be too internally divided to be effective.
Posted by:Fred

#8  Is that the one labeled "LINKE"?
Posted by: eLarson   2005-09-20 17:38  

#7  The SPD is now governing with the Greens but they would need a third party. Neither the CDU nor the FDP would want to join. There is a third left wing party, called, I think, Left run by Oscar Lafontaine that is really wacko Greens or communists who left the Green party and want nothing to do with the SPD. Plus, everybody is playing head games with everybody else. Perhaps TGA will drop by to straighten out all our errors. But when he does, the bottom line will still be German politics are a mess.
Posted by: Mrs. Davis   2005-09-20 11:32  

#6  Yes there is a personal feud, but coalitions form all the time in spite of personal enmity. Are the policies of the SPD and Greens so different that they cannot share power. After all, the FDP and Greens seem even farther apart and talk of a coalition was entertained.
Posted by: ed   2005-09-20 10:58  

#5  Left vs SDP

Schroeder and Lafontaine hate each others guts, IIUC. And going left would hand the NEXT election to the right - most Germans dont like the left, and dont want SDP to ally with them.

TGA?
Posted by: liberalhawk   2005-09-20 10:54  

#4  FDP is free market and opposes subsidies for alternate energy, and restrictions on nukes, which Greens favor, I saw someone suggest they could make common cause in opposition to subsidies for coal and other polluting industries (the coal miners all vote SDP, I presume) Not srue how it will play out. Also would lead to split in Greens - some Greens are yuppie enviros, others are anarchist types.
Posted by: liberalhawk   2005-09-20 10:53  

#3  What's keeping the SPD, Greens and the Left Party from forming a majority coalition?
Posted by: ed   2005-09-20 10:48  

#2  I think Joschka Fischer said, "When hell freezes over." or words to that effect. Whatever happens, it's a mess and unfortunately it seems to be an accurate representation of Germany and its politics today. I sure hope they don't do the Japan thing and end up in the tank for a decade.

Maybe they could find a way to undo reunification.
Posted by: Mrs. Davis   2005-09-20 10:33  

#1  David's Medienkritik (in English) held out the possibility of a "Jamaica" coalition featuring the Yellow (pro-business FDP), Black (Merkel's CDU/CSU) and Green parties coming together. Talk about your strange bedfellows!
Posted by: eLarson   2005-09-20 10:26  

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