Election leaves Germany in limbo
Protracted power struggle ahead as Social Democrats
and conservatives fight for Merkel’s mantel.
BY MATTHEW
KARNITSCHNIG
September
27, 2021 4:02 am
https://www.politico.eu/article/election-germany-results-limbo/
BERLIN —
Looks like Germany won’t be saying Auf Wiedersehen to Angela Merkel for a while
yet.
The
country’s general election on Sunday left the two dominant political camps —
the center-left Social Democrats (SPD) and the conservative alliance of the
Christian Democratic Union (CDU) and Christian Social Union (CSU) — only 1.6
percentage points apart. That signaled a drawn-out coalition-building process
that is likely to leave Merkel in charge, on a caretaker basis, through the
fall, if not longer.
About the
only thing one can say for certain now is that post-Merkel, Germany will remain
on a solidly pro-EU transatlantic course, with moderate parties continuing to
steer Europe’s most populous country. With neither of the two larger parties
garnering more than about a quarter of the vote, however, their traditional
dominance over governing coalitions seems certain to end.
Instead of
the kind of two-party coalition that has dominated Germany’s postwar politics,
the country is almost certain to be governed by a diverse three-party alliance.
As of early
Monday morning, the biggest unknown remained who would be in charge.
Leaders of
both the SPD and CDU/CSU laid claim to Merkel’s mantel. The SPD is leading
slightly, with 25.7 percent, ahead of the CDU/CSU with 24.1 percent, according
to preliminary official figures.
Both camps,
which have governed together for 12 of the past 16 years and have vowed to end
their collaboration, said they’d try to form a coalition with the third and
fourth-placed parties, the Greens and the pro-business Free Democrats, which
finished with 14.8 percent and 11.5 percent respectively.
It was
already clear on Sunday that the CDU under party leader and chancellor
candidate Armin Laschet was on course for its worst result since World War II.
Unbowed, Laschet said he wanted to build an alliance “from the center of the
Bundestag,” the German parliament.
“We will do
everything in our power to form a federal government under the leadership of
the CDU/CSU, because Germany now needs a coalition for the future that will
modernize Germany,” he said in remarks at party headquarters in Berlin as a
masked Merkel, who staged a last-ditch effort to campaign for Laschet in the
final days of the campaign, stood beside him.
Scholz sees mandate
His main
rival, SPD candidate Olaf Scholz, Germany’s finance minister, laid his own
claim to the chancellery. He said voters had shown a clear preference for his
party, which he led out of the doldrums at the outset of the campaign, when it
was in third in the polls with just 15 percent, to apparent victory.
“I think we
can conclude from the result that we have a mandate to say we want to form the
next government,” Scholz said. “The citizens want change.”
Just what
kind of change was difficult to discern from Sunday’s early returns. Both the
Greens and FDP seemed destined to join the next coalition. The key question:
Will they unite with the center right or the center left?
The Social
Democrats would appear to have the upper hand. Not only did they finish first,
but they also came from behind, improving by more than 5 percentage points on
their 2017 finish. By comparison, the CDU and its Bavarian partner, the CSU,
which together won about 33 percent in the last election, imploded.
What’s
more, Scholz, who was mayor of Hamburg before becoming finance minister and vice
chancellor in 2017, is vastly more popular than Laschet. Nearly half of SPD
voters said wouldn’t have voted for the party if he weren’t its chancellor
candidate, according to exit poll data. For the CDU and Laschet, that was only
the case for 10 percent of voters.
Still,
under Germany’s political system, such considerations are largely irrelevant.
Unlike in many other European countries, the parties don’t need a mandate from
the head of state to attempt to build a coalition, a tap that usually goes to
the party that finishes first. Instead, it’s up to the parties themselves to
seize the initiative and form a government.
There’s
plenty of precedent in Germany’s postwar politics for the runner-up to end up
taking control of the government. In 1969, the conservatives finished the
election about 3.5 percentage points ahead of the SPD. But the SPD’s chancellor
candidate Willy Brandt still managed to craft a coalition with the FDP.
There was a
similar outcome in 1976, when the CDU/CSU candidate, Helmut Kohl, led his party
to a first-place finish with what would today be a spectacular result of 48.6
percent. Even so, the governing coalition at the time between the SPD and the
FDP together had more than 50 percent, which was seen as a vote of confidence in
their stewardship. The SPD itself won just 42.6 percent of the vote, however.
Options open
With
neither of the big parties able to lay claim to a clear mandate this time, it
will come down to their leaders’ negotiating acumen, as they seek to convince
the two smaller parties to join them. Conversely, the heads of the FDP and
Greens, which have sharply contrasting views on many issues, could band
together themselves to decide which of the two larger parties they want to
govern with.
Sunday
evening, neither party was prepared to say much more than that they were
keeping their options open.
Robert
Habeck, co-leader of the Greens, who years ago negotiated a three-way tie-up
with the CDU and the FDP in his home state of Schleswig-Holstein, spoke on
various talk shows in platitudes, saying he wanted a coalition that “was up to
the task of handling the challenges ahead.”
He did say
that while many in his party’s base would have preferred a two-way tie-up with
the SPD, the necessity for a three-way coalition completely changed the
calculus. “There isn’t a clear voter preference so it will come down to the
parties reaching an agreement,” he said.
Whatever
the coming constellation, the Greens would not deviate from their insistence
that combating climate change should top the political agenda, said Annalena
Baerbock, the party’s chancellor candidate and co-leader alongside Habeck.
“Laying the
groundwork for the country to become climate neutral over the next 20 years
will be the biggest challenge for the next government,” said Baerbock, who led
her party to its best-ever result in a federal election.
She vowed
that the Greens would not be pushed around in the coming negotiations. In
addition to more stringent climate policies, she said her party would insist on
making social justice and youth issues priorities for the next government.
“Politics
isn’t a bazaar,” she said.
While the
Greens counted as the election’s biggest winner — the party improved on its
2017 result by nearly 6 percentage points — many in the environmental movement
were hoping for more, especially after the party surged in the polls early in
the campaign to 25 percent.
Baerbock
took responsibility for the Greens’ fall back to earth, citing personal
mistakes she had made during the campaign. That lost promise did little to
dampen the Greens’ post-election celebration in Berlin, where the party
faithful cheered on their radiant leadership duo. The party seemed particularly
buoyed by its strong standing among younger voters, bolstering its claim to be
the party of the future.
Free Democrats’ second chance
The Free
Democrats posted only slight gains over their 2017 result, adding just under a
percentage point, according to projections. Still, the party, which is also
popular with young voters, hailed the result as a significant victory, if only
because it confirmed that the FDP would once again be at the center of
coalition talks.
The party
was in a similar position in 2017, but it didn’t end well for the free-market
liberals. After negotiating over a three-way coalition with Merkel and the
Greens for a month, FDP leader Christian Lindner pulled the plug on the talks,
leaving the CDU/CSU with no choice but to seek the embrace of the SPD, a
partnership that many believed even then was well past its expiration date.
Lindner,
who was battered in the media and the polls in the wake of that move (he
justified it by saying Merkel wouldn’t make enough concessions in the FDP’s
direction) can’t afford to be a deal-killer a second time.
He repeated
his preference for a CDU-led government on Sunday, saying the two parties had
“the most in common.” Yet he also insisted it was too soon to begin making
serious decisions about what course to pursue.
“We are now
very independent, having established ourselves as a double-digit party, and
we’re going to exercise that independence in building a centrist coalition,”
Lindner said.
The
far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD) won 10.3 percent of the vote, a loss of
more than 2 percentage points over 2017. Both the CDU and SPD have ruled out
collaborating with the anti-immigrant party, whose leadership has been in
disarray in recent years, in any coalition.
The Left
party, whose roots lie in East Germany’s communist party, won 4,9 percent of
the vote. Even if a quirk in the rules will allow the party to have MPs despite
failing to reach the 5 percent treshold, it will have only 39 MPs, make a
leftist coalition with the SPD and the Greens extremely unlikely.
Merkel,
meanwhile, faces the distinct possibility of having to hand over power after 16
years to the party she defeated to become chancellor.
She’ll also
face blame from her own ranks for bungling her succession by not engaging in
the campaign with more gusto.
Perhaps
most frustrating for Merkel, who has spoken wistfully in recent months of
post-political life full of books and travel, is that, come December, she may
again be donning a shiny silk suit to deliver the chancellor’s traditional New
Year’s address.
This article was updated.
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