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Germany's Social Democrats back coalition with Merkel

Germany's Social Democrats back coalition with Merkel

March 04, 2018 | 12:24 PM
Dietmar Nietan, treasurer of Germany's Social Democrats (SPD) party, announces the results of the SPD party members' referendum on whether or not to join a new coalition government with German Chancellor Angela Merkel's conservatives.

* Two-thirds of SPD members back coalition deal* Breaks deadlock following September election* New government could be in place this month

Members of Germany's Social Democrats (SPD) voted in favour of a coalition with Chancellor Angela Merkel's conservatives on Sunday, opening the way to a new government for Europe's largest economy.

Two thirds of the membership backed the deal, a party official said -- a wider margin than many had expected -- ending more than five months of political uncertainty after an inconclusive election.The result is set to hand long-serving chancellor Merkel a fourth term in office at a time when the European Union is looking to its largest country for leadership on a host of economic and security issues.It clears the way for a re-run of the "grand coalition" that has governed Germany since 2013.Acting SPD leader Olaf Scholz said at the party's Berlin headquarters: "The vast majority of SPD members followed the party leadership's suggestion.""We now have clarity: the SPD will join the next German government," he added.Scholz had said on Saturday turn-out in the poll had been "very, very high" after an intense internal campaign that pitted the party's pro-coalition leadership against its more radical youth wing, which campaigned for "No".The SPD initially planned to go into opposition after a disastrous result in September's election, but agreed to negotiate with Merkel's conservatives after talks with the pro-business Free Democrats (FDP) and the environmentalist Greens on a three-way tie-up collapsed in November.They thrashed out a coalition agreement which SPD leaders hailed for its commitments to strengthening the EU and giving them some key government rolesMerkel could be sworn in as Chancellor by mid-March.

March 04, 2018 | 12:24 PM