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German opposition expects February ‘compromise’ election date

BERLIN (AFP) – Germany’s conservative opposition said yesterday that a February “compromise” date for an early election was likely after the dramatic collapse of Chancellor Olaf Scholz’s government.

Last week the liberal Free Democrats (FDP) withdrew from Scholz’s three-way coalition, depriving it of a parliamentary majority and setting off wrangling over the date of an early election.

While Scholz has suggested a timetable which would lead to a general election in late March, the opposition CDU had initially demanded polls in January.

The CDU’s general secretary Carsten Linnemann said yesterday after further talks that he now expected the election to take place on either February 16 or 23. “It looks like that’s how it will end up. That will be a compromise,” Linnemann told public broadcaster ZDF.

The CDU is riding high in opinion polls and its leader Friedrich Merz had been pushing for a January election date, but Linnemann admitted that this would be “ambitious”.

Linnemann said he expected “we will get clarity very soon, probably in the coming hours.”

The precise date will be officially determined once Scholz calls a confidence vote in Parliament.

If, as expected, he loses, President Frank-Walter Steinmeier will have 21 days to dissolve Parliament, and elections will then have to be held within the next 60 days.

German Chancellor Olaf Scholz, Finance Minister Joerg Kukies and Social Democratic Party (SPD) General Secretary Matthias Miersch attend the SPD board meeting in Berlin, Germany. PHOTO: AFP
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