German election on knife edge as months of coalition wrangling loom

The Guardian

By Philip Oltermann in Berlin
Christian Lindner of the Free Democratic party, Annalena Baerbock, co-leader of co-leader of Alliance 90/the Greens, and Armin Laschet, leader of the CDU. Composite: EPA/Getty

Germany is braced to enter a new “Dutch-style” political era after federal elections on Sunday, as a knife-edge vote points to months of complicated coalition wrangling.

Outgoing chancellor Angela Merkel joined the campaign trail at a rally in the western city of Aachen on Friday night in an attempt to help her designated successor from the Christian Democratic Union (CDU), Armin Laschet, close the gap on the centre-left Social Democratic party (SPD).

“We need a stable government,” Laschet told the crowd at the event in his home city. “If you want stability for Germany, the CDU-CSU [Christian Social Union] have to be in first place tomorrow.”

“We will turn this game around,” vowed the conservative Bavarian state premier, Markus Söder, at the event in the southern German state capital. Germany, he warned, must not become an “experimental site for leftwing tomfoolery”.

Publish : 2021-09-26 14:32:00

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