Traffic light parties continue explorations – with these sticking points

The SPD, Greens and FDP will continue to talk on Monday about the formation of a traffic light coalition after the federal election. Representatives of the three parties will meet in Berlin in the morning for in-depth exploratory talks.

Further meetings are announced for Tuesday and Friday. On Wednesday and Thursday, the general secretaries of the parties want to continue working in small groups, while SPD chancellor candidate Olaf Scholz travels to Washington to meet the G20 finance ministers.

The exploratory talks point to the greatest conflicts over taxes, debts and the financing of climate protection measures. The Greens co-leader Robert Habeck emphasized on Sunday evening how important it is for the negotiations with the FDP to be successful. “Failure is actually not an option,” he said on the ZDF program “Berlin direkt”.

If a coalition of the SPD and the Union were to emerge again, Germany would “go nuts”. “We have to pull ourselves together a bit,” said Habeck. The finances are of course a “huge problem”.

FDP general secretary Volker Wissing affirmed the position of his party at the weekend: “All interlocutors know our demands: no tax increases and no easing of the debt brake,” he told “Bild am Sonntag”. “We’re holding on to that. Debt does not create a future. ”

Dhe parliamentary managing director of the FDP parliamentary group, Marco Buschmann, named these framework conditions for a possible alliance “The red lines of the FDP”. There are still other points of friction, but all three parties are ambitious. The discussions must show whether there is frictional energy for a forward impulse. So far everything has been very serious and professional. It is clear to everyone involved: It’s about our country“, Says Buschmann.

Habeck said you also have to make it clear that there are probably projects that can only really flourish in a coalition with the FDP and the Greens. If the negotiations get stuck, it is worth taking a look “at what is lost if it does not succeed and I think that then holds us together quite well,” said Habeck. Now the “time of the imagination” begins.

The aim is to draw an interim balance at the end of the week. Then, above all, the FDP and the Greens want to decide whether to enter into coalition negotiations with the SPD – or whether there may have to be another exploratory round. The Greens and FDP have explicitly kept the possibility of a Jamaica coalition with the Union open. The Green Youth gave such an alliance a clear rejection at the weekend. (dpa, Reuters)

Share this article:

Leave a Reply

most popular