German FDP demands policy change as price
for coalition with Merkel
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[September 27, 2017]
BERLIN (Reuters) - The leader of
Germany's liberal Free Democrats (FDP) said his party will only join an
alliance with Chancellor Angela Merkel if there is a change in the
direction of government policy.
Merkel's conservative bloc remained the largest parliamentary bloc after
Sunday's national election but bled support to the far-right. With
coalition talks set to get underway, her only realistic option now is a
tie-up with the FDP and the environmentalist Greens.
But the FDP and the Greens disagree on issues from energy to tax, Europe
and migration, complicating the path to any deal on forming a so-called
'Jamaica' coalition - a reference to the parties' respective colors:
black, yellow and green.
Further complicating matters, Merkel's conservative bloc compromises two
parties: her Christian Democrats (CDU) and their Bavarian allies, the
Christian Social Union (CDU), who are shaping up as an obstacle to a
coalition deal.
"Some people are glorifying Jamaica as a romantic political project,"
FDP leader Christian Lindner told Die Welt daily.
"The truth is, there is an arithmetical majority, but the four parties
each have their own election mandates. Whether these can be allied
without contradiction and in the interests of the country remains to be
seen," he added.
"Politics is not mathematics," he said, adding that if in doubt, his
party would remain in opposition.
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German Chancellor Angela Merkel, leader of the Christian Democratic
Union Party (CDU) and Horst Seehofer, head of the CSU and Bavarian
premier attend their first parliamentary meeting after the general
election in Berlin, Germany September 26, 2017. REUTERS/Fabrizio
Bensch
"Everyone must know that the Free Democrats will only join a
coalition if there is a change of course in German politics."
Policy on Europe is one area where the FDP differs from Merkel's
conservatives and the Greens, though the Free Democrats have made
some conciliatory noises since Sunday's election.
The FDP favors a "multi-speed Europe" - differentiating a northern
core of fiscally disciplined, wealthy member states from the rest.
By contrast, the Greens say in their party program they reject a
division of Europe.
Lindner, who said during the election campaign that Greece should
leave the euro, said on Monday his party could not agree to a common
euro zone budget that would help redress economic imbalances within
the bloc.
(Writing by Paul Carrel; Editing by Toby Chopra)
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