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Germany coalition deal: Social Democrats vote to join government | Germany coalition deal: Social Democrats vote to join government |
(35 minutes later) | |
German Chancellor Angela Merkel is set to form her fourth government after the opposition Social Democrats voted in favour of another grand coalition. | German Chancellor Angela Merkel is set to form her fourth government after the opposition Social Democrats voted in favour of another grand coalition. |
The vote by 464,000 rank-and-file members ends five months of political deadlock since September's election. | The vote by 464,000 rank-and-file members ends five months of political deadlock since September's election. |
The Social Democrats had been split between the party's leadership, which backed joining the coalition, and its radical youth wing, which did not. | The Social Democrats had been split between the party's leadership, which backed joining the coalition, and its radical youth wing, which did not. |
Mrs Merkel has been in power for 12 years. | Mrs Merkel has been in power for 12 years. |
Social Democrat (SPD) voters approved continuing the coalition with 66% in favour. Vote counting went on through the night at the party headquarters in Berlin. | |
Interim SPD leader Olaf Scholz declared: "Now we have clarity. The SPD will enter the next government". | |
Senior Christian Democrat member, Volker Bouffier, called the result a "good day for the people in our country and positive for the future of Germany". | |
The chancellor now faces a range of challenges, including strong opposition from the nationalist Alternative for Germany (AfD). | |
The anti-immigrant party entered the federal parliament for the first time in September with just over 12% of the vote and now makes up the largest opposition group. | |
The SPD suffered its worst ever election result and many blamed their coalition with Mrs Merkel's Christian Democrats (CDU/CSU) for that poor performance. | |
Mrs Merkel, who lost 65 seats in the election, had tried and failed to form an alliance with the liberal Free Democrats (FDP) and the Greens. | |
She was forced to pay a higher price for continuing the existing coalition - the new finance minister will be a Social Democrat. | |
The end to uncertainty, including the possibility of fresh elections, will be greeted with relief in the European Union's institutions, where Germany, Europe's largest economy, is a major influence. |