Merkel’s
party wins German election with 41.5%, no absolute majority –
official results
Angela Merkel’s conservative bloc (CDU-CSU) has won the German election with 41.5 percent of the votes. The bloc beat its main rival, the Social Democrats (SPD), which received 25.7 percent of the votes, according to preliminary final results.
RT,
22
September, 2013
Merkel
secured herself a third term and led the conservatives to their best
result in more than 20 years. However, the CDU's junior coalition
allies - the pro-business Free Democrats (FDP) - received only 4.8
percent, which is below the five percent threshold required to gain a
seat in parliament.
Merkel
has urged her party to celebrate after leading her conservatives to
their best result in over 20 years.
"We
will do everything we can in the next four years to make them
successful ones for Germany," she said at the CDP headquarters
adding that it was too early to consider coalitions. "We will
talk about this tomorrow when we know the final results - but we can
surely celebrate tonight, as we have done a great job."
Seventy-two
percent of German voters have turned out to the polls.
Having
not won an absolute majority, Merkel’s CDU-CSU party may be forced
into talks with Steinbrueck’s SPD – which Merkel worked alongside
between 2005 and 2009. This may mean she is forced to adopt more
leftist policies such as a national minimum wage, which is being
heavily campaigned for by the SPD.
Although
Germany has a minimum wage set for certain jobs - such as cleaners
and construction workers - there is no national minimum wage. Merkel
opposes Steinbrueck’s plans and prefers to let employers and
employees decide on minimum pay on a sector-by-sector,
region-by-region basis.
RT’s
correspondent in Berlin, Peter Oliver, says that a grand coalition
between Merkel and the SPD is unlikely as the SPD have said it “just
doesn’t sit with them.”
Political
commentators and the voters themselves - particularly the younger
ones - have been highly critical of the whole election campaign,
claiming it has not addressed the real issues facing Germany.
In
contrast to Germany’s economic powerhouse image broadcast by
mainstream media, many Germans are feeling the heat of the economic
crisis. While unemployment might be comparatively low, many people
are scraping by on low wages.
“I
think if you ask someone from Spain, they would tell you that Germany
is an economic land of milk and honey. This just isn’t the case,”
Christian Deubner from the Foundation of European Progressive Studies
told RT.
There
is also frustration among the electorate about a possible new bailout
for Greece, along with the NSA spying scandal which tarnished
Merkel’s image.
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