November 15, 2024
Scholz Kept Rolling Over for German Finance Chief. Then He Cracked #NewsGerman

Scholz Kept Rolling Over for German Finance Chief. Then He Cracked #NewsGerman

CashNews.co

(Bloomberg) — There was no holding Olaf Scholz back as he told astonished reporters in the halls of Berlin’s chancellery building on Wednesday why he had just decided to dismiss Finance Minister Christian Lindner and bury his own three-party coalition.

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“Anyone who joins a government must act seriously and responsibly,” the normally reserved center-left leader said. “They must not go missing when things get difficult. They must be prepared to compromise in the interests of all citizens. But that’s not what Christian Lindner is about.”

The personal attack was the culmination of a breakdown that, according to Scholz aides, started late last year with a bruising budget ruling by Germany’s highest court. Yet signs of trouble in the so-called “progress coalition” between Scholz’s Social Democrats, Lindner’s Free Democrats and Robert Habeck’s Greens were apparent from the start, when the parties arrived in government with disparate aims and no shared vision for the future of Germany.

Despite taking office in the midst of the Covid-19 crisis, Scholz’s early tenure was eased by the government’s decision to repurpose €60 billions of pandemic-related funds for climate and other special projects. That allowed each of the coalition members a path to pursuing their goals. For Lindner, that meant not raising taxes and sticking to Germany’s constitutional restrictions on debt; for Scholz, protecting the welfare state and raising minimum wage; and for Habeck, funding climate initiatives and expanding renewable power.

Yet that honeymoon was brought to an abrupt halt several months later with Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and the realization that under former chancellor Angela Merkel, Germany had become overly reliant on Russia for energy. In the days after the February 2022 invasion, the coalition was able to create a special debt-financed fund of €100 billion to ramp up defense spending and meet NATO’s 2% spending goal for the first time in decades. Yet with war unfolding in the east, a winter energy crisis on the horizon, and an immediate need to increase military spending, the first cracks in the coalition began to emerge.

Those became public in spring 2023 when an early version of a planned heating reform was leaked to Bild, Germany’s largest tabloid. The legislation, spearheaded by Habeck, was designed to incentivize a shift away from fossil fuels and toward electric-powered heat pumps. Yet in Bild’s telling, it was an ideologically motivated attempt by the Greens to force costly upgrades on homeowners. Once the proposal was made public, the FDP seized on every opportunity to dilute it.

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