Germany’s
Scholz nears his endgame. Here’s what’s going to happen.
A confidence
vote set for Monday will almost certainly lead to an early election on Feb. 23.
December 13, 2024 4:20 am CET
By Nette Nöstlinger
https://www.politico.eu/article/germanys-scholz-nears-his-endgame-heres-whats-going-to-happen/
BERLIN — Few other countries can choreograph a government
collapse that's as painstakingly slow and deliberate as Germany is doing right
now.
Monday’s vote of confidence in Chancellor Olaf Scholz in the
German parliament, which he'll almost certainly lose, is just the latest step
in a process that started in early November and culminates in a snap election
on Feb. 23.
And even though the far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD)
is bound to try to throw a spanner in the works in the coming week, what
happens next is largely predictable.
The constitution, designed to prevent the kind of tumult
experienced during the Weimar Republic — which helped enable the rise of the
Nazis — contains a series of provisions intended to make the unravelling of a
government as stable and orderly as possible.
Here’s our guide to what to expect.
What is the
next step?
When Scholz faces the German Bundestag on Monday, the
majority of the country’s 733 lawmakers are expected to withdraw their
confidence in the center-left politician.
Losing the vote is a procedural and necessary step to pave
the way for early elections, after Scholz’s fractious three-party coalition
fell last month.
During Monday’s session, Scholz is set to make a 25-minute
statement first, in which he is expected to outline his reasons for calling a
vote of confidence. His speech will be followed by a parliamentary debate
lasting around two hours, after which lawmakers will head to the booths to
either withdraw or confirm their confidence in the chancellor.
Is the
outcome predetermined?
Although nothing is impossible, Scholz is very likely to
lose the vote — which is also what he is hoping for.
The only party that might do something unpredictable is the
AfD, which is known for its unexpected, tactical moves in previous votes. Some
of its lawmakers have already said they are planning to support Scholz because
they fear the likely next chancellor, Friedrich Merz from the center-right
Christian Democratic Union (CDU), could plunge Germany into war by being a
stronger backer of Ukraine against Russia than Scholz has been.
“I do not want to see Mr. Merz in a position of
responsibility under any circumstances,” Jürgen Pohl, the first AfD lawmaker to
announce he would vote for Scholz, told POLITICO's Berlin Playbook. Only a
minority of the AfD’s 76 lawmakers are, however, expected to follow suit.
The AfD is currently polling in second place, which would
likely make it the biggest opposition force after the election — so it has an
interest in dissolving parliament.
In any case, the parliamentary group leaders of the Greens
look set to neutralize possible far-right surprises by calling on their
lawmakers to abstain in the vote.
That means that even if all AfD lawmakers and Scholz’s own
parliamentary group support the chancellor, a majority would still be a long
way off.
What happens
next?
If Scholz loses the vote, he will on Monday afternoon
propose to German President Frank-Walter Steinmeier to dissolve the Bundestag,
the chancellor told reporters on Wednesday. “If the president follows my
proposal, the voters will be able to elect a new Bundestag on February 23. That
is my goal,” he said.
Scholz and his minority government, which includes his own
center-left Social Democratic Party and the Greens, will in the meantime remain
in power in its full capacity.
But as Scholz does not have a majority in parliament — which
is necessary to pass laws — and is expected to be voted out of office soon, he
is considered a lame duck, at home and abroad.
How did we
get here?
In early November, just hours after it became clear that
Donald Trump had won the United States presidential election, Scholz appeared
before cameras to announce that his battered tripartite alliance was collapsing
in rather dramatic fashion over spending issues.
Scholz’s coalition — consisting of his SPD and the Greens on
the left side of the political spectrum, and the fiscally conservative Free
Democratic Party on the center right — was never a match made in heaven. Both
the SPD and the Greens favor a strong social safety net and big investment to
speed economic growth and the green energy transition. The FDP, on the other
hand, believes in less government and curtailed spending. We wrote up the full
analysis here.
What will
Germany's next government look like?
Merz’s CDU and its Bavarian sister party, the Christian
Social Union, are currently leading in the polls by a wide margin, on 32
percent support. That is double what Scholz's SPD, which is just behind the AfD
in third place, is expected to receive.
With the conservatives set to win the anticipated February
election, the big question is who will become their junior coalition partner
and if that party (most likely the SPD or the Greens) will be strong enough to
make a two-party coalition possible. Due to the rise of the AfD and the
creation of the new populist-left Alliance Sahra Wagenknecht (BSW), three-party
coalitions — which are uncommon in postwar Germany and tend to be more volatile
— might become the new normal.
The Greens have recently been cozying up to Merz’s CDU by
underlining their similar foreign policy stances. Both parties tend to be more
favorable to backing Ukraine in its war with Russia than Scholz, who has been
campaigning on what he calls a “prudent” approach.
But while Merz is not ruling out a coalition with the
Greens, Bavarian CSU leader Markus Söder — who has made bashing the Greens one
of his personal trademarks — said in a podcast this week that he would veto
such an alliance.
The FDP is meanwhile struggling to even make it into the
next Bundestag. The party, which has descended into crisis over revelations
that it methodically planned to blow up Scholz's coalition, is polling below
the 5 percent threshold necessary to gain seats in parliament.
Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário