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Partly translated from the German
The Financial Times (subscription required) reported that first exploratory talks towards forming a new German government will start on Friday, the two main parties, Angela Merkel's CDU and the Social Democrats (SPD) agreed. Andrea Nahles, secretary-general of the Social Democratic party, warned however that there might be no final agreement before December or even January. "There is no reason for urgency and it's up to Ms Merkel to try and form a government", she said.
An emergency convention last Friday night of senior SPD figures overwhelmingly endorsed beginning exploratory talks with Angela Merkel’s CDU/CSU on forming a Grand Coalition, although without any commitment to reaching a final agreement. There was no guarantee that the first round of talks would lead to formal negotiations, wrote the FT (subscription required) because the SPD must first consult a 200-strong party convention before it can go ahead. And even then, a formal grand coalition can only be formed if it is approved by a referendum of all 470,000 SPD members, the leadership decided last week.
In spite of the fact that a grand coalition is the most popular solution for voters (Politbarometer opinion poll) and there is widespread expectation that such a solution will eventually come about, the SPD rank-and-file are deeply unhappy about the prospect. The same poll suggested that 65 per cent of party members opposed it.
Both the SPD and Ms Merkel’s CDU, along with the Bavaria-based Christian Social Union, its smaller sister party, have been laying down their preconditions for talks, with most centred on whether any deal will involve tax increases – proposed by the SPD and opposed by the CDU, as reported by Handelsblatt. In an interview with Bild, Hannelore Kraft, the SPD Premier of Nordrhein-Westfallen, argued that "there will not be a grand coalition at any cost".
In another article, the Handelsblatt reported further that the CDU/CSU has also invited the Greens to exploratory talks. The first meeting should take place at the end of next week. The Greens had already decided to accept such an invitation - even if a black-green alliance is considered extremely unlikely in their own ranks.
Writing in the Süddeutsche Zeitung, Michael König sketches what steps might be required in order that a CDU/CSU and Green coalition could actually be realised:
The Süddeutsche cites Axel Schäfer, deputy chair of the SPD’s parliamentary faction as warning that until a new government is formed, Angela Merkel "no longer has the legitimacy to make decisions over fundamental questions of European policy", referring to the European Council summit on 22 October, during which issues such as improving the EU’s competitiveness are due to be discussed.