Angela Merkel Isn’t Going Anywhere
Angela Merkel is not going to resign as the Chancellor of Germany. “No,
that’s not on the table,” she said, with a small, suppressed smile, when
asked, by one of two interviewers for the German television broadcaster
ZDF, if that prospect had, “in quiet moments,” occurred to her. She
hasn’t had many quiet moments this weekend, a juncture at which her job,
at least to observers, has never seemed more in danger—even if Merkel
herself doesn’t see it that way.
Almost two months ago, her party, the center-right Christian Democratic
Union, and its Bavarian partner, the Christian Social Union, came in
first place in the elections for Germany’s legislature, the Bundestag.
But they didn’t have a majority: the C.D.U./C.S.U. coalition won just
less than thirty-three per cent of the vote, giving them two hundred and
forty-six seats out of seven hundred and nine. The Social Democrats, the
traditional center-left party, meanwhile, suffered a historic collapse,
winning only about twenty per cent, its poorest result since the days of
the Weimar Republic. And, worse, in keeping with the Weimar theme, the
far-right Alternative for Germany came in third, with more than
eleven per cent of the vote and ninety-four Bundestag seats. A party
so extreme hasn’t been in the Bundestag since the fall of the Third
Reich. It is not an acceptable coalition partner, for Merkel or for
anyone. The leaders of the Social Democrats didn’t want to form one,
either, on the theory that their party had done so poorly because no one
had any idea what it stood for anymore (it is, indeed, pretty hard to
tell), and being a junior coalition partner wouldn’t help. The obvious
alternative was for the C.D.U./C.S.U. to form a coalition with two even
smaller parties, the Greens, who have an environmentally focussed
progressive agenda, and the Free Democrats, who are business-friendly
conservatives. The Germans called this the Jamaika Koalition, because
the colors of the parties were, respectively, black, green, and yellow,
like the Jamaican flag, and also because German television-news
producers seemed to like illustrating long segments on politics with
pictures of beaches and palm trees.
On Sunday night came the fall of Jamaika—or, as German press headlines
put it, “Jamaica is over!” and “Jamaica—done.” After weeks of talks, and
what Merkel, in interviews on Monday, said were dozens of pages of
carefully worked-out agreements on everything from energy policy to
kindergarten funding, the Free Democrats walked away from the
negotiations. This means that Germany, technically, has only a caretaker
government at the moment, and Merkel has only some narrow options. She
could try to govern with a minority, cobbling together the votes she
needs each time a bill comes up. (Under Germany’s rules, this is
possible, though it has not been attempted in the postwar era.) She
could call new elections, which wouldn’t happen until, perhaps, March.
(“I wouldn’t rule it out,” Merkel said, indicating that new elections
might be preferable to the first option.) She could try to keep
negotiating, perhaps with the S.P.D.; Frank-Walter Steinmeier, Germany’s
President, whose role is usually only a symbolic ratification of what
the election winners work out, said on Monday that he would encourage
this approach. He belongs to the S.P.D., and so he might have some
influence there. Or Merkel could, in fact, resign, and make it all
someone else’s problem. But whose? One reason that Germany is in this
fix is that, after twelve years with Merkel in charge, there is no other
obvious leader with her national, let alone international, standing. It
is telling that one of the European concerns about the end of Jamaika is
that no one but Merkel has the authority to get the Brexit talks
done—until there is a settlement in Germany, those may be paralyzed,
too.
Why did Jamaika fail? A few weeks ago, the Free Democrats did not seem
like the ones most likely to blow up the negotiations—they seemed lucky
to have returned to the Bundestag at all, after years of not winning a
single seat, under the leadership of an ambitious young leader,
Christian Lindner. (Germany has a form of a proportional representation
system: a party either has to win a seat outright or get more than five
per cent of the national popular vote.) The Greens and Merkel’s Bavarian
partners seemed to be the farthest apart, ideologically—the C.S.U. is
generally even more conservative than the C.D.U., and is under pressure
from Alternative for Germany, which has siphoned off some of its voters.
One of the last difficult issues in the negotiations was the Greens’
commitment to family reunification for war refugees who are legally
settled in Germany, meaning that they might bring relatives over later.
This is called, in German, Familiennachzug—President Donald Trump
likes to call it chain migration, and it is a point of tension for
populists throughout the West. And yet on Monday the head of the C.S.U.
said he thought that the parties could have arrived at a
compromise. Merkel, on ZDF, said she thought so, too.
“Did they just not want it?” one of the ZDF interviewers asked her,
referring to the F.D.P. At that, Merkel shrugged slightly, and said that
she was not going to judge other people’s motives. Lindner said that he
had simply concluded that it “was better not to govern at all than to
govern falsely.” Some of the German press coverage, though, has noted
that Lindner’s aspirations—he comes across as a wannabe Emmanuel Macron
of the center right—might have outrun both his party’s vote tally and
its supposedly practical, corporate-friendly spirit. That would be less
of a problem if the Alternative for Germany wasn’t waiting to take
advantage of any vacuum. Julia Klöckner, who is one of the deputy heads
of the C.D.U., tweeted that Lindner’s exit, which he had portrayed as a
dramatic break, was instead an example of “well-prepared spontaneity.”
Merkel, too, portrayed the final break as a slow act of many hours. She
is a deliberate woman, and knows planning, one assumes, when she sees
it. She also went out of her way, in interviews with ZDF and
ARD, another broadcaster, to praise the Greens. They hadn’t worked so
closely together before, and were farther way to start with, “but we
built trust,” she told ARD. “I learned a lot.”
And no, she wouldn’t resign. “When people asked me, on the
campaign trail, if I was ready to serve Germany for four more years, I
always said that I was,” Merkel said. “I see no reason to go back on
that promise.” Her party seems to be behind her, for now. Asked if she
would resign if it were the S.P.D.’s condition for entering a coalition,
she said, in a roundabout way, that blackmail wasn’t healthy for
democracies. (So, no.)
She was sorry about Jamaika, she said. “We could have gotten a lot
done.” But she was calm, and seemed willing, for the moment, to wait.
When one of the two ZDF interviewers asked if she was afraid of what new
elections might bring, she said, “I’m not actually afraid of anything.”
When the other interviewer asked about reports that Macron had
“telephoned” her, she said, “there was an exchange, but it wasn’t by
phone.”
“Video conference?” the interviewer said.
“S.M.S.?” his colleague offered.
“Something digital and modern!” the first one said.
Merkel smiled, and, though she described Macron’s well wishes, she never
gave the answer away—or her exact destination, after leaving Jamaica.
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Many ESC fans from all over the world are so very sad because we lost Joy Fleming - one of the best singers ever.
Betty MacDonald fan club founder Wolfgang Hampel sings 'Try to remember' especially for Betty MacDonald fan club organizer Linde Lund at Vita Magica September
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