BERLIN (AFP) – German voters head to the polls in a winter election on Sunday but may not have a new government until the spring.
The confident frontrunner Friedrich Merz has said he’s aiming for an Easter deadline and urged potential allies to get ready for speedy talks.
But arduous coalition negotiations tend to drag on for weeks if not months in Germany, spelling long stretches of political paralysis before a new chancellor takes charge.
“If we spend weeks, possibly months, possibly with party conferences and even member surveys then the period in which this country is without a majority capable of governing will be too long for me,” he said in a Politico interview this week.
In Berlin, a bulging in-tray of challenges awaits whoever is the next leader, from a stagnating economy to the Ukraine war and an increasingly hostile Trump administration.
Current polls give the conservative CDU-CSU alliance of Merz a strong lead over Chancellor Olaf Scholz’s Social Democrats (SPD).
But the surveys also suggest that Merz’s party, now polling around 30 per cent, would need a junior coalition partner to gain a parliamentary majority. Merz could potentially opt to work with Scholz’s centre-left SPD in a so-called “grand coalition” of the two big-tent parties, known as the GroKo in German.
Scholz – whose own motley alliance with the Greens and the liberal Free Democrats (FDP) broke up in November – would not be expected to personally join such a government.
Alternatively, a victorious Merz could invite the Greens into an alliance, but this so far has been strongly opposed by the CDU’s Bavarian sister party the CSU.
Attempting to forge any such pact forces former campaign trail foes to quickly make nice.
The parties first engage in exploratory talks before moving on to full coalition negotiations.
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