The government formation in Germany is walking a tightrope as the Social Democrat chancellor Olaf Scholz avoids calling a vote of confidence, the Official Opposition accuses him of complete inaction while many are calling on the country’s president Frank Walter Steinmeier, to take action in order to get the country out of the political deadlock.
Schultz has now lost the trust of his fellow citizens and it is almost impossible to convince them that he can stand worthy of the chancellorship, political analysts say, based on the strength of the Social Democrats and Greens in the government,
Since the Social Democrat chancellor has been “stabbed” by both of his government partners – the Free Democrats pulled out after Christian Lindner, the finance minister, was dismissed while many Greens who remain on Scholz’s side are asking him to set a date for the vote in the Bundestag with him whistling… indifferently – one solution, the German press comments. Solts should leave the chancellorship, handing the baton to Boris Pistorius, Germany’s most popular politician. However, it is not clear whether Pistorius wants to become a candidate for chancellor, the German newspaper Bild comments.
“Olaf Scholz now has a big task: to promote Boris Pistorius and for him to leave office. Both as chancellor and as head of the Social Democrats (SPD). He has many advantages as a politician but now it would be smart to put forward the most popular politician – not the least popular….it would be better for us if Boris took over. This will only work if Olaf paves the way,”
Social Democrat Tim Stoberock points out on Instagram, adding:
“It would be better for the country if Olaf now nominates Boris as the party’s candidate for chancellor. Otherwise, the risk of Friedrich Murch becoming chancellor would be too great.”
In avoiding setting a date for the vote, 69-year-old Christian Union parliamentary group leader Friedrich Merz and 65-year-old SPD Bundestag leader Rolf Mitchenich will have to agree on when the chancellor should ask for a vote of confidence, political analysts say.
Olaf Scholz must decide for himself
Because it is not really up to the leader of the Christian Union party, Friedrich Merz, to have a say in such matters, Scholz must decide for himself how he wants to deal with his lost government majority, Torsten Frye underlines.
In the same vein, the chairman of the Christian Union Youth Party, Johannes Winkel, is also on the same wavelength. In a statement to Bild, he says: “Because Scholz is afraid of the voters, the most absurd delaying tactics are being used. Michenich and Merz should now set the date for a vote of confidence instead of the chancellor. It is a terrible waste of time.” Murch, who celebrates his 69th birthday today, traveled early from Sauerland to Berlin because of the government crisis.
In the debate on the exact timing of the vote of confidence by the Social Democrat chancellor, the deputy head of the Union’s parliamentary group in the Bundestag, Mittelberg, from the Christian Democrats, called for German President Frank-Walter Steinmeier to intervene.
“In this radio broadcast, I appeal to President Steinmeier to wake up the chancellor to his constitutional duties,” Miedelberg told German radio station Deutschlandfunk.
At the same time, Green Party leader Britta Haselman called for a clear statement from Chancellor Olaf Scholz on the timing of the confidence vote.
“There must be clarity on when the vote of confidence will be called for,” Hasselman told the daily “Morgenmagazin” on the German state-run ZDF network.
However, discussions on calling new elections are expected to take place in a conference call with heads of state in all German states expressing their views on the survival of the governing coalition.
According to reports, this is a “regular preliminary meeting on the preparation of the elections, as is the case with every federal election”.
After the removal of Christian Lindner, leader of the Free Democrats and finance minister, Olaf Scholz (SPD) must ask for a vote of confidence in the Bundestag, and for early elections to be called, the federal parliament must be dissolved within 60 days.
At a time when the political world in Germany is in turmoil, the Green foreign minister and government partner of Scholz, Annalena Burbock, was seen jogging… to clear her head.
“After this incredible week, the only thing that helps is jogging around Berlin late at night, feeling the wind and the cold, seeing the lights, and thinking about everyone out there who never gives up… And we continue tomorrow!”. The 43-year-old minister went jogging yesterday afternoon, posting a photo on social media wearing her sneakers in Berlin’s Spree.
Ask me anything
Explore related questions