Chancellor Olaf Scholz asked Germany’s parliament on Monday to declare it has no confidence in him, taking the first formal step towards securing an early national election following his government’s collapse.
The neoliberal Free Democrats’ departure from Scholz’s three-way coalition over their refusal to take on more debt has left Scholz’s Social Democrats and the Greens governing without a parliamentary majority just when Germany faces its deepest economic crisis in a generation.
Addressing parliament, Scholz framed the snap election as an opportunity for voters to set a new course for Germany, casting it as a choice between a future of higher investment and one of cuts that he said the conservatives were promising.
Scholz, who served as finance minister for four years in a previous coalition with the conservatives before becoming head of a new government in 2021, accused other parties of wanting to block the investments Germany needed.
“Shortsightedness might save money in the short term, but the mortage on our future is unaffordable,” he told lawmakers.
Scholz remains as caretaker leader until a new government can be formed after the planned February 23 election, and already the campaign is turning to arguments over which urgent measures he should pass with opposition backing before then.
Rules drawn up to prevent the series of short-lived and unstable governments that played an important role in helping the Nazis rise to power in the 1930s means that the path to new elections is long and largely controlled by the chancellor.
After Scholz loses the vote, he can request a dissolution of parliament from President Frank-Walter Steinmeier, who has already endorsed his timetable.
Scholz has outlined a list of urgent measures that could pass with opposition support before the election, including 11 billion euros ($11.55 billion) of tax cuts and an increase in child benefits already agreed on by former coalition partners.
Measures to tackle fiscal drag – the tendency of inflation to shift taxpayers into higher tax brackets – and high energy prices look less certain. -REUTERS
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