Exploratory talks: who is talking to whom now and when

Exploratory talks: who is talking to whom now and when

The explorations for the new government have started. This time, it is not the parties with the highest share of the vote who will decide who will be Chancellor in the end, but the FDP and the Greens. However, the “kingmakers” still have to come to an agreement.

If the Greens have their way, the future government could become a traffic light coalition. The FDP is currently more attracted to a Jamaica alliance with the CDU. So when a government is formed, the two junior partners must first come to an agreement. That should take time – and also depends on which of the large parties makes the better offer in terms of allocation of positions and concessions in terms of content.

On Tuesday, the chairmen of the Greens, Annalena Baerbock and Robert Habeck, therefore initially sat down with Christian Lindner and Volker Wissing from the FDP. Talks with the SPD and the Union will only be on the agenda in the coming days.

Talks with SPD and Union planned

Amfraeitag want to speak to the Greens and the FDP again. It should “first substantive questions are deepened,” it says from the FDP. On Saturday the Greens will meet for a small party congress to discuss how to proceed.

As it was said on Thursday from Union circles, the Union’s top now wants to discuss opportunities for a possible joint government with the Greens on Sunday evening at 6.30 p.m. with representatives of the FDP – previously it had been said that an appointment for Saturday would not come about. Talks with the Greens are planned for the beginning of the coming week. A Green spokeswoman neither wanted to confirm nor deny that. Party leader Annalena Baerbock had said the day before that there was an invitation from the Union and that they were in contact.

Also on Sunday, the SPD wants to explore separately with the Greens and FDP how the chances for a so-called traffic light coalition are. That was already announced on Wednesday. According to the current state of information, the SPD meets with the FDP before it meets with the Union in the evening. Then the Social Democrats talk to the Greens.

The Greens and the FDP initiated the talks on forming a government on Tuesday with a four-person meeting and the much-discussed selfie on Instagram. On this Friday, these two parties will meet again in a larger group before they will talk separately to the SPD and the Union from Sunday onwards.

“Opposition out of frustration is not the answer”

Green parliamentary group leader Göring-Eckardt told the newspapers of the Funke media group (Thursday): “I do not see at the moment that the Union could be considered capable of exploring, let alone capable of governing.” You need a reliable government. She is always of the opinion that no option should be ruled out among the democratic parties. “But when I look at the state of the CDU, I don’t see how a coalition with the CDU and CSU should go.”

CDU federal vice and health minister Jens Spahn said on Deutschlandfunk: “Opposition just out of frustration, that can’t be the answer now. We also have a responsibility for Germany.” A coalition of the Union, FDP and Greens would have the chance to resolve long unresolved conflicts, for example on climate protection, agriculture and migration. “A bourgeois-ecological-liberal government would be better for our country than a traffic light.”

Ampel vs. Jamaika

When asked whether CDU boss Armin Laschet had to go, Spahn said: “The question does not arise at this point in time.” The heads of the CDU and CSU should now conduct the exploratory talks. Union parliamentary group vice Carsten Linnemann (CDU) said on Wednesday evening in the ARD program “Maischberger” that the union had to go into the talks to form a government. “The chance is still there,” he said of a possible Jamaica alliance.

According to DPA information, the CSU named its team for the explorations: In addition to CSU boss Markus Söder, CSU regional group leader Alexander Dobrindt, general secretary Markus Blume, CSU vice Dorothee Bär and the parliamentary manager of the regional group, Stefan Müller, are to hold the talks. The “Welt” reported on this.

With a view to the FDP as a possible coalition partner, the Green Youth warned against too much trust in the market. “In this election, people who had previously voted conservatively, fleeing from the CDU’s hostility towards the future, have now ended up with the FDP,” said the federal spokesman for the Green Youth, Georg Kurz, of the German press agency. “Unfortunately, behind the fresh image of the FDP has so far only been the old story of the miraculous forces of the market.”

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