Greens soften stand on talks with Merkel

Published September 22, 2005

BERLIN, Sept 21: Germany’s Greens have agreed to hold talks on forming a new government with Angela Merkel’s conservatives after a leading member of Merkel’s party called a link with the environmentalist group ‘a realistic option’.

The Greens, an ecologist and pacifist party that grew out of the protest movement of the 1960s, said they would meet Merkel’s Christian Democrats and Christian Social Union (CDU/CSU) on Friday, although party chiefs said much separated the two camps.

“We are extremely sceptical,” Greens co-leader Claudia Roth told journalists on Wednesday after a meeting with their current senior coalition partners, the Social Democrats (SPD).

Neither Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder’s centre-left alliance nor Merkel’s centre-right alternative won a parliamentary majority in Sunday’s election, meaning the conservatives must join with the SPD or they must each find a new partner.

The apparent softening of the Greens’ stance comes a day after their symbolic leader and German Foreign Minister Joschka Fischer said he planned to step back from the frontline of the party. Fischer had ruled out joining a coalition with Merkel.

The ‘Jamaica’ coalition — which refers to the unlikely marriage of the conservative CDU/CSU, their traditional partners the liberal Free Democrats (FDP) and the Greens — is the new buzzword in German politics.

The name comes from the black-yellow-green colours of the party banners — the same as those of the Jamaican flag.

Wolfgang Schaeuble, deputy leader of the CDU in parliament, insisted in more than one newspaper interview on Wednesday that ‘Jamaica’ was possible given there were no easy solutions to the political stalemate.

“Black-Yellow-Green is not a tactical ploy, but a realistic option,” he told Handelsblatt business daily. “A grand coalition would be the alternative and far less desirable,” he added, referring to a CDU/CSU partnership with the SPD.

The CDU/CSU will hold talks with the liberal Free Democrats (FDP) on Thursday. —Reuters

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