Germany
is finally getting a new government – and it will be plunged straight into
crisis mode
John Kampfner
With the
country enveloped in gloom and facing mayhem from the US and Russia, it’s hard
to imagine a more fraught time to take power
Thu 10 Apr 2025 05.00 BST
https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2025/apr/10/germany-new-government-crisis-us-russia-china
Germany is about to get a new fitness trainer. So declared
Markus Söder, one of the political leaders who have just announced a coalition
agreement. In one of the quirks of the country’s constitution, the Bavarian
Christian Social Union (CSU) will play a significant role in the new
administration, and Söder used his moment in the limelight to play the
entertainer.
It was a curious way to announce the arrival of a new
government, expected to be sworn in during the first week of May. Since the
elections of 23 February, Germany will have been in limbo for two and a half
months, and all while Donald Trump rampages across the world.
The circumstances could not be more inauspicious. The new
chancellor, Friedrich Merz, must deal with an out-of-control United States,
Russia taking advantage of the mayhem by feigning interest in a peace deal
while making further military inroads in Ukraine, and China increasing
influence as anti-US sentiment increases. Domestically, Germany’s economy,
already stuttering, faces the 20% US tariffs imposed across the European Union,
plus further punitive levies on its all-important auto industry. To compound it
all, a few hours before the Christian Democrats (CDU)/CSU and Social Democrats
(SPD) took to the stage to seal their deal, an opinion poll put the far-right
Alternative für Deutschland (AfD) in the lead for the first time.
All of this will concentrate minds. Germany and Europe can’t
afford a repeat of the last coalition, which foundered amid acrimony and under
the lacklustre leadership of Olaf Scholz. The stakes were high then; they are
stratospherically higher now.
“Germany is getting a government that is capable of action
and is strong,” said Merz. “We will govern well together,” he added, as he
looked smilingly towards the SPD leader and probable next deputy chancellor and
finance minister, Lars Klingbeil. It is an unlikely bromance, but they will
have to get on. As both pointed out, the “political centre”, as Germans call
mainstream parties, must show it can work. Otherwise the AfD is waiting in the
wings for the next election, due by 2029 at the latest.
During the negotiations, which were carried out with little
turbulence and few leaks, Merz was accused by party hardliners of giving away
too much to the SPD. The result, as set out in the coalition agreement, is a
necessary compromise, which as ever leaves all sides feeling they have won some
and yielded some.
Merz has secured tougher immigration controls – checks at
borders, no family for the first two years, and five years rather than three
for citizenship applications. Corporation tax will be reduced. Rules around the
minimum income guarantee will be tightened. Klingbeil and his team have
preserved increases to the minimum wage and other welfare measures.
All parties were agreed on their approach to Ukraine and
Russia. The introduction of a national security council within the chancellery
to deal with the many emergencies the country faces is a welcome if belated
move. Some form of national military service will be reintroduced, but it is
expected to be opt-in, with benefits for participants, rather than compulsory.
The climate crisis barely got a mention.
Everyone is talking the talk about modernisation and
removing bureaucracy. A new digitisation ministry is designed to kickstart
Germany’s lamentable digital provision. Will this analogue and cash-based
society finally join the modern world?
As ever in modern Germany, gloom has enveloped the country.
Some of it is understandable – a country that craves stability is having to
come to terms with a world more on edge than at any time since the formation of
the Federal Republic in 1949. Yet much of it is self-indulgent. Having just
voted in a general election, with the highest turnout since reunification in
1990, and having ensured a relatively stable two-party coalition (the CSU is
not seen as a separate entity), Germans have turned on Merz before he has even
been given the seals of office.
His biggest “crime” was to force constitutional changes
through the outgoing parliament rather than waiting for the new one to be
formed. He knew he had to do this, as the far right and radical left would have
voted the changes down. In so doing, he has paved the way for an injection of
more spending on defence and an injection of €500bn to tackle the country’s
ailing infrastructure.
As I wrote a few weeks ago, he used unprincipled means for
principled ends, and he, the SPD and the Greens should be lauded for pushing it
through.
Even in these desperately difficult times, and despite its
fraught beginnings, this coalition could work. Merz and Klingbeil seem to work
well; Boris Pistorius, the popular defence minister, is expected to stay in his
job, providing much-needed stability.
Under Scholz, Germany was absent without leave. The EU was
rudderless. The economy atrophied. Just over two months after the last
government took over, Vladimir Putin had invaded Ukraine, and all the parties’
preparations were torn apart. This time, darkness has descended even before the
work has begun. There will be no honeymoon for Merz, no first 100 days. It is
hard to imagine an accession as fraught as this one. This will be the last time
anyone cracks jokes.
John Kampfner is the author of In Search of Berlin, Blair’s
Wars and Why the Germans Do It Better
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