German poll winner Olaf Scholz says shortage of lorry drivers is Britain’s own fault
German poll winner in Brexit jibe over truckers: Olaf Scholz says shortage of lorry drivers is Britain’s own fault… as he vows to form coalition by Christmas
Social Democrat Olaf Scholz blamed Brexit for the current lorry driver crisisHe said he hopes the UK ‘will manage the problems coming from’ leaving the EUHis SPD party emerged with a narrow victory in Germany’s election on Sunday
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Germany‘s would-be new leader has wasted no time in taking a swipe at the UK.
Social Democrat candidate Olaf Scholz, whose SPD party emerged with a narrow election victory on Sunday, blamed Brexit for the current lorry driver crisis.
Asked if he would send German drivers to help Britain, the 63-year-old former socialist activist said: ‘We worked very hard to convince the British not to leave the union.
‘They decided different and I hope they will manage the problems coming from that.’ Mr Scholz said he wanted to form a government as quickly as possible with the pro-business Free Democrats (FDP) and the Greens, and set a target of Christmas to strike a power-sharing deal. The SPD picked up nearly 26 per cent of ballots cast, leading to 206 seats, to the 24.5 per cent gained by Angela Merkel’s Christian Democrats (CDU) in their worst election performance in 72 years.
Social Democrat candidate Olaf Scholz, whose SPD party emerged with a narrow election victory on Sunday, blamed Brexit for the current lorry driver crisis
Angela Merkel stepped down as Chancellor at the election but will stay on as caretaker chancellor until a new government has officially been formed
Mr Scholz’s party needs 162 more seats to take power, with a 368-seat majority needed to lead the 735-seat Bundestag, and the closely run race has left the FDP and the Greens as the likely kingmakers.
Both parties ‘won a considerable increase in votes’, Mr Scholz said. ‘This is why we will be trying to enter into coalitions with these parties.
The German Parliament and its possible coalitions following Sunday’s election
‘My idea is that we will be very fast in getting a result for this government, and it should be before Christmas if possible. Germany always has coalition governments, and it was always stable.’
FDP leader Christian Linder said he wanted to ‘launch sounding-out talks with the Greens’ to ‘try and find common ground’.
But sealing an agreement for a so-called traffic light coalition could prove a challenge. The three parties have radically different views on several key issues. Mrs Merkel stepped down at the election but will stay on as caretaker chancellor until a new government has officially been formed.
The CDU’s candidate to replace her, Armin Laschet, was last night still refusing to concede.
‘Olaf Scholz is not the king,’ he reportedly told aides, according to the German tabloid Bild.
‘No party has emerged from this election with a clear mandate to form a government,’ he said as he too looked for ‘exploratory talks’ with the FDP and Greens.
Mr Laschet acknowledged he had a ‘personal share’ of responsibility for his party’s dire showing at the polls but said he could still govern.
‘We are convinced that a government led by the CDU/CSU is the best thing for our country,’ he added.
Markus Soeder, the leader of the CDU’s sister party, the Bavarian Christian Social Union, piled the pressure on Mr Laschet’s gaffe-strewn campaign by hinting he should stand aside.
He said a second-placed party had ‘no entitlement’ to form a government ‘so we can only make an offer’.
The CDU, which picked up more than a third of votes in 2017, fared so badly that Mrs Merkel’s former constituency went to the Social Democrats. SPD victor Anna Kassautzki, 27, was not born when Mrs Merkel first won the northern seat of Rugen and Greifswald in 1990.
French Europe minister Clement Beaune, one of Emmanuel Macron’s most trusted aides, urged a ‘swift’ resolution to the political deadlock, adding that France wanted ‘a strong German government in place.’
‘The talks between German political parties and us should start right now so that we get to know one another,’ he said.
Whoever claims the crown will drag Germany further into a giant EU blob
Commentary by ALEXANDER VON SCHOENBURG
Now begins the wrangling. The imminent departure of Angela Merkel as Germany’s chancellor, amid the country’s closest election results in decades, leaves Europe’s powerhouse facing an uncertain future.
In a nation where coalitions are the norm, all politics is done by debate and negotiation rather than ballot-box victories.
But this time the power-sharing is more complex than ever. The most likely outcome might be a union of three Left-of-centre parties, in a wobbly triple combination. That’s something Germany hasn’t experienced since the early 1950s.
Only one thing is sure. Frau Merkel has embedded Germany so deeply in the European Union superstate that there can be no reversal of our headlong pro-Euro direction.
Germany is emasculated.
We have handed over our sovereignty to Brussels. Whoever is sitting at the top of the table in Berlin is now of secondary importance.
Contender for the top job: Social Democrat candidate Olaf Scholz (centre)
In 16 years as head of state, Angela Merkel has achieved her goal of turning Germany into a locomotive engine, pulling Europe ever deeper into integration.
Coming from Eastern Germany she has, consciously or not, cemented a change of mentality in this country, the most populous in Europe. Frau Merkel has remoulded us in an image resembling something closer to her former home, the communist German Democratic Republic (GDR).
But she has done so at the expense of her party, the formerly conservative Christian Democratic Union (CDU).
Under party leader Armin Laschet, the CDU suffered its worst result since the existence of the Federal Republic. It was virtually wiped out in the east of the country. In Saxony, the party that once was triumphant under Helmut Kohl was relegated to third place, with the ultra-conservative Alternative for Germany (AfD) now the biggest party in the eastern federal state.
It is a defeat so ignominious that, by the time you read this, Laschet might well be ousted.
Merkel has moved the CDU so far to the Left of centre, that conservatives no longer feel represented by her. They resent her politics and either no longer vote at all or give their vote to other parties out of frustration.
Nobody has any idea what the CDU stands for these days, as Merkel threw overboard all ideological luggage from the past and enthusiastically adopted formerly Left-wing positions.
She embraced open borders and the centralisation of government, she slashed spending on the Armed Forces, she was lax on law and order.
In short, she dragged her party so far to the Left that it became indistinguishable from the Social Democrats. Gleefully, they positioned themselves as her anointed heirs.
Merkel has done to the Christian Democrats what Tony Blair did (in the other direction) to Labour, hauling her party into the centre and then across to the other side.
The CDU is no longer a conservative party. Like a football team that loses its superstar player, it must now completely redefine itself – and it doesn’t know how to do that.
Just as Labour in Britain has been unable to pull out of its downward spiral since Blair’s departure, it is hard to see what the CDU can do in the post-Merkel era.
But this is Germany, of course. Don’t imagine there will be overt chaos. We’re far too well organised for that.
The key to power now lies with the minority parties, particularly the Greens and the Liberals (FDP). They have each scooped up between 10 and 15 per cent of the national vote.
The CDU and their main rivals, the centre-Left SPD, both polled around 25 per cent. Whoever can persuade the Greens and Liberals to come aboard will form the next government.
During months of haggling, both leading parties will offer to rewrite their manifestos, adopt new policies, abandon pledges and ditch allies. There is nothing more cynical than coalition politics in action.
In the meantime, Merkel will stay on as the caretaker chancellor, probably into the New Year, allowing her to deliver one more traditional address to the nation.
Her potential successors are Laschet (if he’s still standing) and the SPD’s Olaf Scholz, whose face is fixed in a permanent grin. He was a hard-Left radical in his youth, fighting for ‘victory over the capitalist economy’.
His task is to convince the pro-business Liberals that he will allow industry to thrive, while persuading the Greens that he will follow a course of reducing carbon emissions.
With typical German hubris, the Greens want Germany to be a global leader on climate change, the world’s No 1 example of clean energy. Liberals prefer to focus on lower taxes and are ardently against an increase in the cost of living for the middle classes.
Right now, they both seem more likely to reject the CDU and back Scholz. Wags are calling this the ‘Jamaica coalition’, because the party colours (red and green, plus yellow for the FDP) match the Jamaican flag.
But it really doesn’t matter what the coalition looks like. They all sing from the same hymn sheet, particularly as far as Europe and foreign policy are concerned.
And even when she has stepped down as chancellor, Merkel will continue to be Europe’s most respected elder statesman. Her protegé, Ursula von der Leyen, will still be President of the European Commission. In other words, no change there. Whether our next chancellor is Scholz, Laschet or Laschet’s successor, Germany will forge ahead with the continued integration of EU countries into a huge blob.
Laschet grew up at the French border and sees no point in nation states at all. He comes from Aachen, which is close to the state lines with Belgium and the Netherlands (the city where the first European emperor, Charlemagne, was crowned). It is no big surprise that he sees France and Germany as one.
Scholz is even more in favour of EU integration than Merkel. Like the socialist activist he once so passionately was, he is an internationalist. His dream is to melt Europe into one superstate.
In fact, most modern Social Democrats, particularly the young, yearn for a future where nation states cease to exist, and we all live in a colourful, multi-cultural society where it no longer matters where anybody comes from.
For Britain, this is by no means all bad news. For one thing, whatever his delusions, French president Emmanuel Macron has no hope of stepping up and taking Merkel’s place as the most prominent politician in Europe.
Ignore his posturing. The man is a laughing stock in Germany, and barely respected in his own country. He could not be ‘first among equals’ among Europe’s leaders, even if he had a complete change of personality. It would take more than that to make him any match for Frau Merkel.
And readers who still harbour fears about the re-emergence of a powerful Germany can be reassured that the ultimate goal of German politicians on all sides is the abolition of nation states, where nationalism is impossible.
All of which makes one conclusion very plain, if nothing else. Brexit was a fortuitous escape for you in Britain.
Many Britons were always opposed to being on board the Euro juggernaut, with unelected technocrats at the wheel. That’s what Merkel has bequeathed to Germany and, no matter who succeeds her, our country can no longer escape the ride.