Federal government
The new coalition is and wants to end the “right spook”
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One day before the Chancellor’s election, Union and SPD signed their coalition agreement. The upcoming federal government announces reforms and investments.
The heads of the CDU, CSU and SPD have signed their coalition agreement and conjured up close cooperation in the coming years. “We know that it is our almost historical obligation to lead this coalition to success. We are determined together,” said CDU boss Friedrich Merz, who is to be elected new chancellor on Tuesday.
Federal government wants to help shape new world order
“The coalition agreement, which we sign today, testifies to this will, seriously, concentrated, and problem -consuming to go to work.” The SPD chair and future vice-chancellor Lars Klingbeil referred to the international challenges. “It is now up to us, the upcoming government, whether Germany is designing this new world order, designing the upheavals or whether we look at and in the end may even be designed,” he warned.
These are the faces of the Merz cabinet
Finance and Vice Chancellor: Lars Klingbeil (SPD)
As finance minister and Vice Chancellor, SPD boss Lars Klingbeil will cite the social democratic part of the future government. The 47-year-old already had practically all important items in the SPD-but it is his first government office
© Imago / Andreas Gora / Imago Images
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The SPD had previously named and presented its cabinet members in the so-called Gasometer of the Euref Campus in Berlin before the signing ceremony in the so-called Gasometer of the Euref Campus in Berlin. When signing the coalition agreement, however, the negotiators who had negotiated the agreement between the Union and the SPD were particularly recognized.
“Citizens convince with reforms and investments”
Merz, Klingbeil and CSU boss Markus Söder pointed out that the citizens are now wanted to convince citizens with reforms and investments. “We will invest now and relieve tomorrow,” said the designated finance minister Klingbeil. “The most important priority is economic strength.” While everyone praised the surprisingly confidential cooperation in the coalition negotiations, Bavaria’s Prime Minister Söder announced that he would pay attention to the big lines from Munich so that the new alliance does not overlook the forest for “Lauter Trees”.
Both Söder and SPD-Co boss Saskia Esken expressly named the goal that the government also had to limit the approval of right-wing populist AfD with its work. “Populistic, illiberal and anti -democratic narratives endanger democracy and endanger the cohesion in our country,” said Esken. Since the largest opposition party in the Bundestag has now been classified by the constitutional protection as secure right -wing extremist, it sees it to put an end to this right spook as the “foremost task of all democrats in parliament and outside of parliament.”
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Source: Stern

I have been working in the news industry for over 6 years, first as a reporter and now as an editor. I have covered politics extensively, and my work has appeared in major newspapers and online news outlets around the world. In addition to my writing, I also contribute regularly to 24 Hours World.