Germany’s
Merz loses leverage as coalition talks sputter
Incoming
Chancellor Friedrich Merz is under growing pressure to win conservative policy
concessions as coalition talks hit key stumbling blocks.
March 24, 2025 4:00 am CET
By Nette Nöstlinger
https://www.politico.eu/article/germany-friedrich-merz-leverage-coalition-afd-spd-cdu/
BERLIN — For Friedrich Merz, the hard part begins now.
The incoming conservative chancellor began coalition talks
with the Social Democrats by giving them exactly what center-left parties have
always wanted, reaching a landmark deal to unleash hundreds of billions of
euros in new borrowing to bolster Germany’s military and infrastructure,
including funds for green energy.
For Merz, long a preacher of fiscal discipline, the
borrowing deal was a historic policy reversal — one that was easy for the
Social Democratic Party (SPD) to endorse. But pressure is now growing on Merz
from inside his own conservative alliance to secure traditional right-wing
policy concessions in return, particularly on migration and cuts to welfare.
The problem for Merz, however, is that his fiscal flip has
already given the SPD what it wanted most — meaning he has ceded much of his
leverage in coalition negotiations.
“This is a clear defeat for the conservatives, right at the
start of the [coalition] negotiations,” said Johannes Winkel, the leader of the
conservative alliance’s youth organization, in a radio interview after Merz and
the SPD agreed the borrowing deal. “The question is, of course, what is the
quid pro quo for this major concession in financial policy.”
Merz’s new vulnerability to attacks from his right flank is
particularly problematic for a chancellor who has vowed to draw his Christian
Democratic Union (CDU) to the right, offering what he sees as a correction to
the centrism of his conservative predecessor, former Chancellor Angela Merkel.
But his move to make a deal with the SPD and Greens on spending could be viewed
as downright Merkelian.
Already, the far-right Alternative for Germany party (AfD) —
set to become Germany’s biggest opposition party when the new Bundestag
convenes — is trying to capitalize, portraying Merz as a closet leftist.
“What do you actually stand for, Mr. Merz?” one of the AfD’s
leaders, Tino Chrupalla, said in parliament last week. “By now, you have the
mRNA of the SPD implanted in you.”
Key points of contention
Merz is under pressure to deliver on his campaign promises,
particularly when it comes to migration and cuts to social spending, which he
suggested in a recent interview is one of the greatest sticking points.
The SPD has core disagreements with him in those areas — and
little incentive to budge now that Merz has already given them their big wish
on borrowing. For Merz, the other key problem is that due to the increasing
power of radical parties on both sides of the political spectrum, he has no
other viable coalition choice, since he has ruled out governing with the AfD.
That means he’s stuck with the SPD, whose leaders are keen
to use that fact to their advantage, vowing to protecting social benefits and
their core labor supporters.
“I want to make one thing clear,” Lars Klingbeil, one of the
SPD’s chief negotiators, said last week. “Anyone who says state modernization
but actually means dismantling employee rights is firstly making a mistake and
secondly has the Social Democrats very clearly against him.”
What is emerging as an even bigger point of contention,
however, is an issue that dominated the election campaign: migration.
Merz, in the weeks before the election, sounded increasingly
tough on migration in order to win back voters who had moved to the AfD. The
front-runner promised to introduce strict border controls on his first day in
office and to reject all irregular entries, including asylum seekers.
The SPD argues that would violate EU law, anger neighboring
countries and undermine European solidarity at a time when Germany needs the
bloc to confront U.S. President Donald Trump on tariffs. Many in the SPD are
also against a proposal to revoke German citizenship for people with a second
nationality if they are found to hold extremist or antisemitic views, arguing
the policy unfairly targets dual citizens. Philipp Türmer, the chairman of the
SPD youth organization, referred to the proposal as an “absolute deal-breaker.”
“Look at the conservatives’ demands in the area of
migration,” Lars Castelluci, a SPD parliamentarian and the deputy chairman of
the interior committee in the Bundestag, told POLITICO. “That will be very,
very difficult.”
Presenting the historic debt deal as an “SPD victory” that
entitles the CDU to a blank check on its own demands “is a game that we will
not play,” Castelluci added. “It’s indecent to put that on us and demand a
price for it.”
The disagreements threaten to delay the formation of
Germany’s coalition government amid already complicated talks, which involve 16
groups with 256 negotiators. After initially suggesting talks will be wrapped
up by Easter, Merz has become less sure of that timeline. “Thoroughness comes
before speed,” he said last week.
“We will have to push through considerable reforms,” the
chancellor-elect said in a television interview recently. “And that will be the
real test of the cooperation between the conservatives and SPD.”
He added an extra note of caution.
“The really difficult talks are still ahead.”
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