Bloomberg
Germany’s Social Democratic leader said he needs concessions from Chancellor Angela Merkel to sell party members on staying in her government, raising the stakes as negotiators seek to finish a coalition pact within a week.
Party leaders aren’t just discussing SPD policy demands on labor, health care and migration as they seek to end the political deadlock in Europe’s biggest economy. They’re also eyeing
the party’s base, which would have the final vote on a coalition accord.
“These are things on which we need to come together,†SPD head Martin Schulz told ARD television. “I have to convince the SPD’s 440,000 members.â€
More than four months after Merkel’s Christian Democratic-led bloc won an inconclusive federal election, possible outcomes for the chancellor include a tie-up with a familiar junior
partner to start her fourth term, governing alone without a parliamentary majority, or seeking a repeat election.
After nine hours of talks that spilled into early Monday morning, negotiators suggested a deal on migration was close. Both sides say they want to finish talks on a rerun of their four-year-old “grand coalition†government.
“There’s a firm determination to find solutions,†Michael Grosse-Broemer, parliamentary whip of Merkel’s Christian Democratic Union, told reporters. “Intense work is under way.â€
An SPD convention last week narrowly backed formal negotiations with Merkel after Schulz pledged to push through additional Social Democratic demands. Many in Merkel’s bloc, including the CDU’s sister party in Bavaria, say there’s little room for concessions.
“Our scope is very narrow,†Annegret Kramp-Karrenbauer, the CDU state premier of Saarland and a Merkel ally, told Bild am Sonntag newspaper before closed-door talks. “I can’t imagine that the SPD wants to start from square one.â€
MEMBER BALLOT
Both sides are trying to hold Germany’s political center after falling to historic post-World War II lows in the election in September. While a 28-page preliminary policy pact agreed on January 12 cleared the way for this week’s talks, the SPD will put any final deal to a ballot by its members, a procedure expected to take two to three weeks.
Facing a potential backlash from SPD members who reject a new partnership with Merkel, senior officials at the January 21 convention said they wanted more: tighter restrictions on
temporary job contracts, an
alignment of doctors’ pay for privately and publicly insured patients, and expanded rights for asylum seekers to bring family members to Germany.
Merkel sought to leave room for bargaining, saying that the preliminary agreement is an “outline.†Talks are scheduled to resume on Tuesday. “We’re ready for a compromise, but we also expect movement†by Merkel’s bloc, Schulz told ARD.