Germany, friedrich merz and Coalition Deal
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Germany’s centrist parties announced on Wednesday that they had formally reached a coalition agreement to allow Friedrich Merz, a conservative, to take the reins as chancellor at a tumultuous moment w...
From The New York Times
“In these stormy times, what is needed at long last is a federal government that is capable of action,” said Robin Winkler, Deutsche Bank chief economist for Germany.
From The Financial Times
Merz’s approval ratings have slumped as voters have grown dissatisfied over his decision to unexpectedly embark Germany on a €1tn debt-funded spending programme.
From The Financial Times
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German Chancellor-in-waiting Friedrich Merz has unveiled a new coalition deal between the country’s two major centrist parties in a bold and optimistic speech in Berlin on Wednesday, hours after it was announced that an agreement to form a new government had been reached.
BERLIN - Germany's far-right AfD party topped a major poll for the first time on Wednesday in a sign of growing dissatisfaction with mainstream parties as chancellor-in-waiting Friedrich Merz seeks to seal a coalition government deal.
Germany’s parliamentary election on February 23 saw a significant shift in the country’s political balance, with the conservative Christian Democratic Union (CDU)/Christian Social Union (CSU) alliance claiming victory while the far-right Alliance for Germany (AfD) gained second place.
By Katrin Bennhold Preliminary official results showed the Social Democrats ahead in Germany’s election, with no party winning a decisive majority and Chancellor Angela Merkel’s Christian ...
Germany's conservatives under chancellor-in-waiting Friedrich Merz on Tuesday looked set to reach a deal with the centre-left Social Democrats (SPD) to form a government aimed at reviving growth in Europe's largest economy despite global turbulence.
The AfD became the first German nationalist party to become the most popular since the foundation of the modern republic.
Once the great hope of the European climate movement, Germany’s Greens are now confronting their relative powerlessness.
Germany's chancellor-in-waiting and leader of the Christian Democratic Union party (CDU) Friedrich Merz, Christian Social Union (CSU) leader and Bavarian Premier Markus Soeder, co-leaders of the Social Democratic party (SPD) Saskia Esken and Lars Klingbeil walk to attend a press conference after reaching an agreement on their coalition government in Berlin,