Merkel defends 'painful' compromises that kept her in power

APD NEWS

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Angela Merkel has defended “painful” concessions she made to the Social Democrats (SPD) to win a fourth term as German chancellor and said criticism from conservatives was not a sign her authority was waning.

Asked whether she was planning to groom a successor to lead the Christian Democrats (CDU) in the next election, Merkel said she wanted a younger generation from her party to fill ministerial posts in a renewed coalition with the SPD.

In an interview with the ZDF public broadcaster, she commented on the rising displeasure among conservatives about her decision to give the SPD the powerful finance ministry. “I understand the disappointment,” said Merkel, who has led Germany for the past 12 years. “And now we need to show that we can start with a new team. We have six ministerial posts to fill and, from my point of view, we need to ensure that not only the over-60s are considered but also younger people.”

Merkel was weakened in a September election in which her conservative bloc bled support to a far-right party thrust into parliament for the first time by voters angry at her decision in 2015 to welcome more than a million immigrants.

In November, her efforts to form a government with two smaller parties failed, leaving the country in political deadlock and prompting some members of her CDU party to demand a succession plan.

Last week, she secured a deal with the SPD to renew a right-left alliance that has ruled Germany since 2013 after making painful concessions on Europe and fiscal policy as well as ceding the finance ministry.

The coalition agreement has been criticised by some conservatives who feel the next government will have an SPD-stamped agenda. The SPD’s 464,000 members have to ratify the four-year government programme in a postal ballot and the results will be announced on 4 March.

Merkel said that if they rejected the deal, Germany would probably hold a new general election. She rejected a suggestion that generous concessions to the SPD had weakened her position in the CDU, saying she had decided to cut a deal for the sake of Germany.

She sought to allay fears among conservatives that, by ceding the finance ministry, the next government would stray from the strict fiscal discipline enforced by the former finance minister Wolfgang Schäuble. “It was a very conscious decision at one point [during negotiations] to say ‘yes’ this works, even though I know and I myself felt it was painful,” Merkel said. “I want to say that the we [the conservatives] have also approved the policies [in the agreement] and the finance minister cannot simply do as he likes.”

Some conservatives are unhappy with her decision to allow the SPD to spend a record budget surplus and to embrace their demands for European reform.

The SPD has criticised the “forced austerity” inflicted by Schäuble on southern European countries such as Greece and had vowed in the election campaign to boost investment.

Social Democrat Olaf Scholz, who is expected to become finance minister, said on Saturday that Germany should not dictate economic policies to its eurozone partners and that mistakes had been made in the past. He said that the SPD supported sound finances and would preserve Schäuble’s balanced budget policy.

(THE GUARDIAN)