For Quick Alerts
ALLOW NOTIFICATIONS  
For Daily Alerts
Oneindia App Download

Move over grand coalition—Germany wants change

|
Google Oneindia News

Berlin, Sep 27: Change has come. The decision of the German electorate is clear. It's game over for the trivial compromises of the last grand coalition. Now it's time for big challenges like climate change, digitalizationand the necessary modernization of Germany.

Move over grand coalition—Germany wants change

These Herculean tasks can now only be solved in cooperation with the smaller parties. In all conceivable coalitions the Greens and the Free Democrats will have a big say. Nothing will work without them — and that's a good thing.

The Greens may come with a high price

The large number of votes that went to the Greens clearly shows that German voters are worried about climate change. Off the back of this result, the Greens will go into the coalition talks to form the next government with plenty of self-confidence. They will be the much-courted bride and so can demand an expensive dowry.

However, Germany is perhaps less ready for change than the Greens, along with their chancellor candidate Annalena Baerbock, had hoped. Especially — as the results also show — when that change costs money.

Move over grand coalition—Germany wants change

The FDP gets a say

That's because forming a government without the liberal FDP will be almost impossible. The Free Democrats see themselves as the great deregulators and could torpedo some of the Green's wishes. They put their trust in the market, digitalization and reducing bureaucracy. They want climate protection, but without tax rises. Exactly how that is supposed to work is something they will have to explain in the initial coalition-finding talks.

CDU/CSU ripe for opposition

What's very clear is the scale of the conservative CDU/CSU's defeat. Even though they lost fewer votes than many polling firms had predicted, you simply can't sugarcoat such a dramatic fall from the last federal elections. Their CDU chancellor candidate, Armin Laschet, could not convince voters, despite achieving some success as the premier of Germany's most populous state, North Rhine-Westphalia.

The CDU's Bavarian sister party, the CSU, also plummeted. It's looking like their worst election result since 1949. After 16 years in government, the so-called "Union" of CDU and CSU, is ripe for the opposition.

The Jamaica option

Of course, the CDU/CSU will try everything in their power to form a new government — a so-called Jamaica coalition (named based on the Caribbean country's flag) of black, green and yellow, the CDU/CSU with the Greens and the FDP.

It is possible, despite the conservatives being only the second-largest party. Three times in the past few decades the chancellor has not been a member of the strongest party in the German parliament. The decisive factor is who can work together to form a coalition with a majority.

Merkel 2.0

That's the challenge for Olaf Scholz, who has led the center-left SPD to become the strongest party in this election. Indeed, it was close, but he has in fact pulled off an unparalleled comeback. The Social Democrats were bumbling along as low as 12% in the opinion polls at the beginning of the election. The one-time big-tent party appeared down and out.

But Olaf Scholz managed to turn things around. What he stands for personally and what he considers truly important is still not clear. He came across as a kind of Merkel 2.0 — predictable, factual, without great emotion. The voters seemed to like it.

The traffic light option

Now Olaf Scholz has to show what he is capable of. If he wants to become the next German chancellor, he will have to enter exploratory coalition talks with the Greens and the FDP quickly. A red, yellow and green 'traffic light' coalition is his goal. But it will not be easy. He will have to make concessions to the smaller parties — either when it comes to climate policies or taxation. The CDU, however, will be trying the same thing, breathing down his neck.

The outcome is uncertain, but the voters have spoken: They do not want a continuation of Angela Merkel's politics. The power and influence of the large parties, the CDU and the SPD, has shrunk significantly compared with previous decades.

German politics is about to get more colorful. This is a chance to tackle the big issues of the future, with climate-friendly, modern politics.

Source: DW

For Daily Alerts
Get Instant News Updates
Enable
x
Notification Settings X
Time Settings
Done
Clear Notification X
Do you want to clear all the notifications from your inbox?
Settings X
X