Merkel's new government blasted as political 'Jurassic Park'

26 Oct, 2009

Trade unions, opposition leaders and the press savaged German Chancellor Angela Merkel's new-look government Sunday over what they called a fiscally reckless and socially unjust plan for the next term.
The conservative Merkel handily won re-election last month and dumped her partners, the Social Democrats, for the smaller, business-friendly Free Democrats, with whom she presented the coalition's plans Saturday.
Their roadmap for the next four years in power, including 24 billion euros (36 billion dollars) in tax breaks, won some praise from business leaders for aiming to lift Europe's biggest economy out of its deepest post-war slump. But the media, which had broadly backed the 55-year-old Merkel for a second term, and leftist leaders poured scorn on the programme.
"After three weeks of coalition talks, there is no nicer way to put it: this start is a failure in terms of the issues, the personnel and the vision," Der Spiegel political reporter Christoph Schwennicke wrote in an online editorial.
He said Merkel's new cabinet resembled a political "Jurassic Park" with policies to match. "There is absolutely no sense of a new beginning...It is as if the figures from the bedrock of the Kohl age had risen again," he said, referring to veteran chancellor Helmut Kohl, who last led a centre-right coalition up to 1998 including a number of the same ministers in Merkel's new team.
Critics also noted that apart from Merkel, the government has no minister from the former communist east, in a year marking the 20th anniversary of the fall of the Berlin Wall.
Although Merkel's Christian Union bloc has long touted fiscal discipline, designated finance minister Wolfgang Schaeuble, a longtime Kohl lieutenant, acknowledged there was no hope for a balanced budget in the next four years. "It is ambitious enough to maintain the debt limit in the Basic Law," he told the Welt am Sonntag newspaper, referring to a federal debt ceiling of 0.35 percent of gross domestic product. Asked whether it was utopian to expect a balanced federal budget, the 67-year-old Schäuble replied: "In this term, of course."
Outgoing Foreign Minister and Vice-Chancellor Frank-Walter Steinmeier, now the Social Democrats' parliamentary group leader, slammed what he called Merkel's "stunning false start".
"For the people of Germany, nothing will get better but a whole lot will be less secure and more expensive," Steinmeier, who challenged Merkel in the general election, told the Bild am Sonntag newspaper.

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