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View Full Version : Germans set to give Merkel grudging win



whottt
09-18-2005, 01:49 AM
http://www.mg.co.za/articlePage.aspx?articleid=251296&area=/breaking_news/breaking_news__international_news/





18 September 2005 07:48

In front of Berlin's shabby former East German Parliament building, several hundred Left party supporters gathered under a grey sky. On stage, a white reggae band was singing about injustice. Next to the beer stall, several protesters stood and chatted, holding placards with the slogan "Against neoliberalism".

"I'm all in favour of women in politics," Margaret Linke (79), who had turned up to Friday night's final rally of Germany's new party, said. "It's just that Angela Merkel is the wrong kind of woman."

As Germans go to the polls on Sunday in the closest general election for decades, it is this unlikely alliance of elderly communist grannies and hirsute left-wing activists who may hold the key to the result in Europe's biggest economy.

Merkel now appears to be ahead. The latest surveys suggest her Christian Democrat party (CDU) is on 41,5% and its Free Democrat partner on 8% -- just enough for her to form a centre-right coalition.

Chancellor Gerhard Schröder's Social Democrats (SPD) is on 32,5%, with the Greens on 7% and the Left party on 8,5%, the poll says. If there is a hung Parliament, Merkel could be forced into a "grand coalition" with the SPD.

If this proves impossible and talks break down, the Left party could then back either Merkel or Schröder when Germany's Parliament meets next month to elect a new chancellor in a secret ballot. It could be a moment of high drama.

"Under Schröder, the rich people have got richer," said Linke. "This is unjust. It's been done at the expense of the poor."

"It's very easy to get rid of something like a welfare state. You know this from [former British prime minister] Mrs [Margaret] Thatcher. It's harder to put it back together again," said Sophie Neuberg, a 39-year-old translator.

Less than a kilometre away, Schröder was addressing several thousand supporters at his own rally, the culmination of an extraordinary comeback. He had been written off as a lame duck ever since announcing an early election last May. Schröder has fought a brilliant campaign, reducing Merkel's 21-point leading the polls to between 7% and 9%.

He will almost certainly lose on Sunday and so, in one of his final campaign speeches, Schröder defended his legacy. He told the rally that his seven years in government have made Germany more tolerant, and harked back to his greatest triumph in most Germans' eyes: his refusal to support United States President George Bush's invasion of Iraq.

Under his leadership, Germany made a decisive contribution to "solving the world's conflicts peacefully", he told supporters, sheltering on the steps of Berlin's neo-classical concert hall.

Nobel Prize-winning writer Gunter Grass then appeared, pointing out that Merkel would have led Germany into the Iraq quagmire. Speaking in an antiquated, elegant German, Grass said Schröder represents a "tradition of tolerance going back to the European enlightenment".

Schröder and his Green party Minister of Foreign Affairs Joschka Fischer have proved they have the courage to tackle reform, Grass said, adding: "There isn't anyone better."

For all this, there seems little doubt Schröder is at the end of his political career. He has indeed made Germany a more liberal place. But he has also failed to reduce unemployment, now at almost five million, or take Germany out of its economic slump.

Merkel has had a disastrous campaign but will probably win. She has proved a lacklustre figure whose vision seems little more than a series of technical tweaks to value-added tax and social security. On foreign policy, she has maintained a Trappist silence. But there will be a sigh of relief in Downing Street if Merkel is voted Germany's first woman chancellor on Sunday.

British officials make little secret of how Prime Minister Tony Blair's relationship with Schröder is broken beyond repair, and hope a Merkel-led Germany will be an ally in Britain's attempts to reform the European Union.

Merkel will want to improve relations with London and Washington, but her priorities will be at home, reviving Germany's economy and keeping ahead of her back-stabbing colleagues.

"She will be a weak chancellor," Klaus Malzahn, a political journalist for Der Spiegel magazine, said on Saturday.

"She will be trapped between the barons in the CDU and the SPD. Germany is not getting an Adenauer or a Willy Brandt. Instead we are getting a Kiesinger," he said, referring to the now-forgotten chancellor who led Germany's last "grand coalition" in the Sixties. Malzahn said it would be a mistake to assume Merkel would immediately improve relations with the US. The CDU leader, unlike Bush, is hostile to Turkish membership of the EU.

"There will be conflicts with the US. But the theme will be swapped. Instead of a row over Iraq, you will have a disagreement over Turkey," he said.

One of the few certainties of this election is that the new Left party will record its best result and could even end up, in the event of a "grand coalition", as the official opposition.

The party is likely to win up to five "directly elected" seats in Berlin alone and have its own strong faction in the Bundestag; a stark contrast to the 2002 election when it won just two seats.

If Merkel does turn into a German Thatcher, as some commentators have predicted, then the post-communists have a rosy future.

"The other parties are all the same," Linke said. "They just disagree over the choice of sauce. Only we are are different." -- Guardian Unlimited © Guardian Newspapers Limited 2005

Vashner
09-18-2005, 02:00 AM
Schroder is one of Saddams bed buddies anyway... would be a good riddance of neo nazi Schroder.

whottt
09-18-2005, 02:04 AM
http://www.doginstinkt.de/images/schr_sock.jpg



I'm can only hope this fucking tool gets booted out on his butt...he's run the German economy into the ground, been caught on the take from Saddam getting bribes from German automakers...and the only thing he's been able to do sucessfully is manipulate and fan anti-American sentiment into an extra term. Unfotrunately he alienated one of his countries major export partners...and fucked Germany's economy and employment rate in the process.


I have high hopes for Merkel....I don't care if she is going to help in Iraq or not...

I know she'll be a good Democratic leader because hey...the people that best understand how socialism and communism can screw you up are those that have lived under it....No one embraces Democracy better than someone who lived most of their life under communist rule...they know to stay the hell away from it...

whottt
09-18-2005, 02:06 AM
Here is a look at the posters Shcroeder was using in his election campaign...


http://www.bild.t-online.de/BTO/news/2005/09/16/wahlkampf__pervers/wahlplakat,property=Bild.jpg


But hey, he's not anti-American and I am just being a blind asshole hater...we should kiss his ass because he knows what's best for us.[/smeagol, John Kerry, dumbass libs]

Vashner
09-18-2005, 02:09 AM
Freedom isn't free.. Freedom for France.. for Belgium.. for the horn of africa.. for England.. and for.. Iraq...

whottt
09-18-2005, 03:35 AM
http://www.boston.com/news/world/europe/articles/2005/09/18/physicist_could_bring_hard_line_tone_to_germany/?page=1

Physicist could bring hard-line tone to Germany
Tight race seen with Schroeder

Physicist could bring hard-line tone to Germany
Tight race seen with Schroeder
By Colin Nickerson, Globe Staff | September 18, 2005

BERLIN -- In an election that could bring profound changes to Europe's largest country, voters today seemed poised to catapult an enigmatic preacher's daughter from the former communist east to the nation's top political post.

Polls suggest that Angela Merkel -- a 51-year-old physicist dedicated to bolstering business, cutting social spending, and mending strategic ties with the United States -- would lead the right-leaning Christian Democrat party to form a new government, although perhaps only by a thin margin. Victory would make her Germany's first woman chancellor as well as the country's first leader raised behind the Iron Curtain.

But the contest between Merkel and incumbent Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder, one of the most bitter in recent German history, appeared headed for a tight finish -- with an estimated 20 percent of voters still undecided on the eve of the election.

The stakes in the election are high. Germany's economy is a mess and many voters blame Schroeder for rampant joblessness and the large numbers of companies fleeing for countries with looser labor laws and lower taxes.

At the same time, voters say they are worried that Merkel -- often compared to the late Ronald Reagan and former British prime minister Margaret Thatcher -- would rush to transform this European welfare state into a land of dog-eat-dog capitalism.

''This may well be the most important election Europe has seen in decades," said Rockwell A. Schnabel, former US ambassador to the European Union.

The vote comes as the nation long regarded as the continent's economic engine is badly misfiring, registering hardly any growth in four years. The downturn is exacerbated by inequities in living standards between east and west despite the $1.5 trillion spent on national unification programs since the Berlin Wall came down in 1989.

Schroeder, who heads the left-centrist Social Democrats, has been unable to complete reforms -- such as overhauling the country's bloated social services system -- that most economists have long seen as necessary.

The local media have made much of the two candidates' contrasting styles: The two-term chancellor radiates charisma, while commentators note that Merkel doesn't so much grin for the television cameras as grimace.

Yet many Germans are latching onto Merkel's conservative message of more social belt-tightening and greater self-reliance.

''She appeals to the German brain, if not the German heart," said Gerd Langguth, professor of political science at the University of Bonn and author of a recent biography of Merkel. ''She doesn't inspire strong emotions. But she does inspire strong thinking about what is truly best for the nation."

Her prescription: hard-to- swallow medicine in the form of cuts in the country's generous social benefits, the lowering of minimum wages, and a foreign policy aimed at bringing Berlin into closer harmony with Washington.

Page 2 of 2 --Schroeder, elected chancellor in 1998, won reelection in 2002 largely because of his open antagonism toward the US-led war in Iraq. Merkel, by contrast, stirred outrage that year by arguing that the country should stick by the United States in its struggles.

But the Iraq war and relations with Washington do not loom as major issues in this election, called a year early after Schroeder's party suffered a humiliating defeat in a regional vote. Some analysts say Merkel's ascent has less to do with her worldview than with Schroeder's bumbling efforts to promote free-market measures -- efforts that have mainly served to alienate left-wingers in his own party while failing to win much support among moderates.

''Schroeder deserves applause for his attempt to initiate painful reforms," said Alfred Steinherr, a senior analyst at the German Institute for Economic Research, a think tank. ''But he doesn't seem to know where to go next."

Only a month ago, polls forecast an easy win for Merkel's party. But Schroeder, who has come from behind before, has regained ground by accusing his opponent of supporting ''inhuman" tax policies that would benefit the rich while picking the pockets of the country's 5 million unemployed.

Still, most polls suggest the Christian Democrats will secure enough seats to ensure that Merkel will be installed as chancellor -- although she may be forced to form a coalition government with Schroeder's Social Democrats. Such an alliance would make it tough to impose her vision.

''She probably has enough steam to get into the harbor . . . but whether she will have the power to overhaul the German system is, I think, quite unlikely," said Gero Neugebauer, professor of politics at the Free University of Berlin. ''Germans want some economic reforms, sure. But not Reaganomics that take away traditional strong social protections."

But other analysts predict Merkel's ascent to the chancellorship would mark a watershed for Germany. They say she has the iron will to successfully challenge powerful unions, welfare interests, and knee-jerk anti-Americanism.

''If Angela Merkel can win a substantial majority, she'll have the sort of extraordinary impact on Germany that Margaret Thatcher had [on Britain], literally turning the country around," said Schnabel, the former US ambassador. ''She's exactly what the country needs. She's dynamic, she's pro-business, and she's not afraid of free markets. Her election would not just shake up Germany, it would shake up Europe."

That view is shared by some German analysts.

''Angela Merkel believes fiercely that Germany needs a freer, more individualistic society, and more market-oriented economy, precisely because she grew up in the very opposite -- in the communist east," Langguth said.

Something of an enigma even after 15 years in Parliament, Merkel seldom discusses her family, her upbringing, or -- most intriguingly -- what caused her to quit the abstract realms of science for the beer-drenched, bare-knuckled hurly-burly of German politics.

The daughter of a Lutheran pastor, Merkel excelled in school, eventually earning a doctorate in physics. At 23, she married fellow physics student Ulrich Merkel -- a marriage that ended in divorce four years later. In 1998, she wed longtime live-in partner Joachim Sauer, a quantum chemist.

In 1989 she joined a grass-roots democracy group as communism came crashing down. She moved quickly up the political ladder, elected to Parliament in 1990 as a Christian Democrat.

Analysts describe Merkel as driven by intellectual antipathy toward state interference in economic areas, and -- like so many Europeans from the former Soviet bloc -- by an attraction to American-style ideals of individualism and self-reliance.

''She simply thinks hard work is better than handouts most of the time," said Steinherr, the economist. ''Ironically, that's become a rather radical position in Germany."

whottt
09-18-2005, 03:40 AM
Schroeder, elected chancellor in 1998, won reelection in 2002 largely because of his open antagonism toward the US-led war in Iraq. Merkel, by contrast, stirred outrage that year by arguing that the country should stick by the United States in its struggles

The daughter of a Lutheran pastor, Merkel excelled in school, eventually earning a doctorate in physics. At 23, she married fellow physics student Ulrich Merkel -- a marriage that ended in divorce four years later. In 1998, she wed longtime live-in partner Joachim Sauer, a quantum chemist.



Analysts describe Merkel as driven by intellectual antipathy toward state interference in economic areas, and -- like so many Europeans from the former Soviet bloc -- by an attraction to American-style ideals of individualism and self-reliance.

''She simply thinks hard work is better than handouts most of the time," said Steinherr, the economist. ''Ironically, that's become a rather radical position in Germany."

You go girl...that's my experience as well...I haven't really been to Europe but I have been to China and Russia...The Russians I met were very pro-American..if not somewhat stoic and unhappy with the quality of life in Russia as it transforms itself to a free country.