Showing posts with label CDU. Show all posts
Showing posts with label CDU. Show all posts

Thursday, 30 January 2014

German Chancellor Angela Merkel

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German Chancellor Angela Merkel

 

[caption id="attachment_11504" align="alignnone" width="320"]7d382f21cd2625855745c8e0cc0bd58e1cb80cae (Photo AFP - John Macdougall)[/caption]



 


Hilfe für die Kanzlerin

 

Ein Saaldiener bringt Bundeskanzlerin Angela Merkel (CDU) nach Beendigung ihrer Regierungserklärung im Bundestag ihre Krücken.

 

Als erster deutscher Regierungschef trug Merkel eine Regierungserklärung im Sitzen vor.

 

Sie hatte sich beim Skilaufen verletzt.

 

Help for the chancellor

 

An usher brings German Chancellor Angela Merkel (CDU) after their government statement in parliament their crutches.

 

As the first German head of government, Merkel argued a government statement in the seats.

 

She had been injured while skiing.

 

(AFP - John Macdougall)

 

(Agence France-Presse, 30 Thursday January 2014 The Roman)

(Translated: R.S.F. toshiki speed news press, Agence France-Presse, 30 Thursday January 2014 The Roman)

 

Thursday, 24 October 2013

Germany summons US envoy amid rage over Merkel spy claims

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Germany summons US envoy amid rage over Merkel spy claims

 

Berlin (AFP)

 

Germany summoned the US ambassador Thursday amid outrage over suspicions that Washington tapped Chancellor Angela Merkel's mobile phone, as she faced allegations she had naively played down the NSA spying scandal.

 

Foreign Minister Guido Westerwelle will meet US envoy John B. Emerson later Thursday, a foreign ministry spokeswoman told AFP, adding: "The position of the German government will be presented clearly."

 

The ministry could not confirm that the step was unprecedented in US-German post-war relations but it was seen as a highly unusual move between the close allies.

 

Merkel was to discuss strategies for confronting covert US surveillance in Europe with French President Francois Hollande on Thursday on the margins of an EU summit, a French diplomatic source said.

 

The German leader called US President Barack Obama Wednesday demanding answers after learning the National Security Agency may have monitored her phone, warning this would be "breach of trust" between international partners.

 

A White House spokesman said it is not now listening in on Merkel, but did not deny the possibility her communications may have been intercepted in the past.

 

The allegations sparked anger in Germany and Merkel's spokesman Steffen Seibert said in a statement that she had "made clear that she unequivocally disapproves of such practices, should they be confirmed, and regards them as completely unacceptable".

 

Berlin daily Der Tagesspiegel, citing government sources, reported that the alleged tapping targeted not Merkel's official mobile phone but a separate device she uses for conducting business for her Christian Democratic Union party.

 

German and US intelligence agencies cooperate closely on counter-terrorism efforts and other matters related to espionage.

 

But the latest revelations threaten the personal trust and close cooperation between Obama and Merkel, which saw the US leader pay a long-awaited visit to Berlin earlier this year.

 

As the NSA scandal raged in Germany during the campaign for the September election, Obama indicated in July that his personal ties with Merkel meant he had no need to spy on her.

 

"If I want to know what Chancellor Merkel is thinking, I will call Chancellor Merkel," he said then.

 

Merkel grew up in communist East Germany, where state spying on citizens was rampant.

 

Germans also carry the trauma of mass abuses by the security services under the Nazi regime.

 

'Diplomatic bomb'

 

News of the eavesdropping suspicion and the German protest came first from Spiegel Online, whose parent magazine reported many of the US surveillance claims made by fugitive intelligence contractor Edward Snowden.

 

The conservative daily Die Welt called the alleged snooping a "diplomatic bomb" and "a punch in the face of German security agencies", while a Sueddeutsche Zeitung headline labelled it "the worst imaginable insult".

 

"If it is true what we are hearing then it would be very bad indeed," Defence Minister Thomas de Maiziere told ARD public television.

 

"The Americans are and remain our best friends but that is not on," he said.

 

"I have assumed for years that my mobile phone is being tapped but I didn't suspect the Americans."

 

However the opposition Greens party attacked Merkel's government itself for having declared the NSA spying scandal -- centred on charges of surveillance of millions of citizens' phone calls, emails, chats and other communications -- effectively over several months ago.

 

"It's scandalous that the government appeased and obscured throughout the entire NSA affair, but that now, when it comes to confidentiality of communications of the chancellor, Merkel voices personal indignation in a phone call to the American president," Greens lawmaker Konstantin von Notz told the Handelsblatt daily's website.

 

"It apparently had to come to this, the chancellor's mobile phone becoming a target," Die Welt said.

 

"Now we're seeing the protest that was missing when the population was being spied on."

 

Merkel had offered assurances during her campaign for a third term -- which she handily won last month -- that she had taken up the most serious allegations of mass NSA spying with Washington and was confident she would receive a thorough answer.

 

The Social Democrats, her chief rivals, were unable to harness public anger over the snooping reports in the election and are now in negotiations to become Merkel's junior partner in her next administration.

 

(Agence France-Presse, 24 Thursday October 2013 The Roman)

 

 

Thursday, 10 October 2013

AFP Video News: Allemagne: triomphe électoral pour Angela Merkel Germany electoral triumph for Angela Merkel

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AFP Video News: Allemagne: triomphe électoral pour Angela Merkel

 

Angela Merkel a remporté un triomphe historique, dimanche 22 septembre 2013, aux élections législatives allemandes et pourrait être reconduite pour un troisième mandat de chancelière pendant quatre ans avec une majorité absolue au Bundestag, selon des projections. Durée: 01:33

 

Germany electoral triumph for Angela Merkel

 

Angela Merkel has won a historic victory, Sunday, Sept. 22, 2013, the German elections and could be renewed for a third term as Chancellor for four years with an absolute majority in the Bundestag, according to projections. Duration: 01:33

 

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=R8PvW6jtAbA&feature=youtu.be

 

(Agence France-Presse, 22 Sunday September 2013 The Roman)

(Edited and Text Translated: R.S.F. toshiki speed news press, Agence France-Presse, 10 Thursday October 2013 The Roman)

 

Monday, 23 September 2013

Can Greece rescue plan succeed?

Can Greece rescue plan succeed?

 

Greeks are carefully watching Germany's election hoping a new government in Berlin will forgive some of its debt.

 

Athens, Greece - Germany’s election means something to almost everyone in Europe.

 

To the Greek street, it signals the point when the government ought to pluck up the courage and ask the Eurozone to forgive a big chunk of its onerous debt, which now stands at 174 percent of its GDP.

 

Four years of austerity have succeeded in eliminating a $49bn budget deficit even while the economy shrank - a painful process akin to playing the piano while someone breaks your fingers.

 

Having done this, Greece finds that its economy has shrunk so much, it is barely able to service its debt.

 

Interest last year cost $16bn, placing the country in what one economist calls a "debt bondage".

 

The debt also acts as a barrier to growth, creating a vicious cycle.

 

"No-one wants to invest in a country which is uncertain, which has lost confidence, which is shrinking," says former finance minister Nikos Christodoulakis.

 

Apart from the risk, there is the reality of high taxes.

 

Angela Merkel’s government has lent the Greeks money on the principle that German taxpayers will never have to pay for the European periphery’s debts, so it seems that the Greeks will be disappointed in their quest.

 

The problem is that most Greek economists no longer see the country’s rescue package as viable without serious intervention.

 

"It is highly doubtful whether this rate of tax extraction from a moribund economy can be maintained," says Athens University economist Yanis Varoufakis.

 

He is admittedly one of the Greek rescue plan’s most severe critics, and has predicted that the euro will ultimately meet its Waterloo in Greece.

 

Varoufakis is not alone, however.

 

"You need fresh money in this country," says Gikas Hardouvelis, a proponent of the Greek rescue.

 

As chief economic advisor to Prime Minister Loukas Papademos, he played a leading role in negotiating Greece’s second facilitation loan last year.

 

"Otherwise we’re going to lose our youth, the country is going to shrink and we’re going to be taken over by foreigners."

 

Competing visions

 

Merkel’s opponent in Germany’s election on Sunday election, Social Democrat leader Peer Steinbrueck, espouses the idea of a massive investment package for the European periphery – a second Marshall Plan; but his party is trailing the ruling CDU in the polls by about 10 points.

 

Greece was essentially bankrupt when it lost the ability to borrow affordably from markets in early 2010.

 

It accepted some $300bn in facilitation loans from the European Commission, the European Central Bank and the International Monetary Fund - the notorious ‘troika’ - who feared a collapse of the euro as a currency should Greece be allowed to fail like a massive Lehman Brothers.

 

In return, Greece had to commit to painful spending cuts.

 

The result of austerity is that the economy has lost 26 percent of its size and is still shrinking.

 

Unemployment is the highest in Europe at 27.9 percent, and twice that for the young.

 

Wages have fallen sharply for those who still work - by about 23 percent in the private sector and as much as twice that in the public sector.

 

Your Prime Minister Antonis Samaras put a brave face on things in an annual economy speech earlier this month.

 

"Greece is turning a new leaf. Its economy, after six years of recession, is turning a new leaf," he said, predicting recovery in 2014.

 

The government is claiming to have finally reached a budget surplus before debt servicing is factored in.

 

It also sees a lower-than-predicted recession in the second quarter (-3.8 percent instead of -4.6 percent) as heralding the beginning of an upturn to growth.

 

The government has been quick to grasp at straws before.

 

In late spring, Samaras foresaw unemployment stabilising.

 

In January his finance minister, Yannis Stournaras, foresaw a return to growth by the end of the year.

 

Both predictions were confounded.

 

Could this time be different?

 

Greek economists think not.

 

They are deeply sceptical about the primary surplus, attributing it to the government withholding payments to private sector suppliers and Value Added Tax returns to businesses, and allowing the social security deficit to widen.

 

They converge on the view that the recession is slowly lifting, but that this merely leaves the economy moribund.

 

"A starving person sheds a large portion of his weight in the first few weeks. As death approaches, the rate of weight diminution declines to zero," says Varoufakis dryly.

 

When $140bn of Greek debt was written off in March 2012, there was an optimistic camp, which felt that Greece’s finances were going to be sustainable.

 

That camp is now deserted because financial markets still won’t touch Greece.

 

At the very least, analysts expect Greece to be given another reduction in interest (it has already fallen from five percent to 3.1 percent) and an extension on the maturity of its loans.

 

But this is merely to prevent a collapse in instalments.

 

Growth is a more elusive goal.

 

The Greek banking system cannot finance it because it is itself bankrupted by the level of nonperforming loans.

 

Two years ago the government brought in the financial consultants Blackrock to audit the banking system.

 

"Blackrock found that about 30 percent of loans were nonperforming in 2011. Now it might well find twice that proportion," says Christoforos Sardelis, who created Greece’s Public Debt Management Agency in 2000, and now works at the National Bank of Greece.

 

Five ways out

 

Austerity has led to such a massive sapping of public and private wealth that the recovery has to come from outside, most Greek economists say.

 

Their ideas fall into two categories – those that reduce debt and those that would bypass it to nurture growth.

 



Land is the easiest thing to do [swap for investment] take a rocky island for 100 years... I don't see any other solution.



 

Gikas Hardouvelis, economist,

 

"I think the eventual solution for the Greek debt problem will be some form of debt-equity swap," suggests Hardouvelis.

 

"We owe at this stage over $288bn to our European partners, and everybody is asking how to get rid of that wolf that scares investors. The best way to do it is to say, ‘let’s swap debt for equity, and come in and invest’. Land is the easiest thing to do… take a rocky island for 100 years... I don’t see any other solution."

 

The idea of mortgaging sovereign territory to Germans might be politically controversial, but it kills two birds with one stone, generating revenue and reducing debt at the same time.

 

Christodoulakis suggests a different kind of swap between Greeks and Germans.

 

Germany coerced two loans out of the Bank of Greece in 1943, during the Nazi occupation.

 

These were never repaid, and Christodoulakis estimates their current value with interest at over $21bn - roughly, he says, Germany’s contribution to Greece’s first facilitation loan in 2010.

 

"I think that a very fair compensation and settlement of the issue would be to count one for the other… It would reduce the amount of Greek debt by 8-10 percent of GDP."

 

This idea enjoys overwhelming popular support in Greece, but has been ruled out by Germany.

 

Sardelis focuses on growth.

 

He believes that a "risk transfer" to an internationally recognised body would unlock liquidity to the south.

 

"The European Investment Bank or the European Central Bank or some other institution needs to take on the role of loan guarantor. That would enable [banks] to issue loans to the peripheral economies on looser terms," he says.

 

"When trust breaks down someone intervenes and restores it. This isn’t happening.”

 

A path to growth?

 

Left-of-centre economists focus on how Greece might regenerate itself without a wealth transfer from the outside.

 

Savvas Robolis, who heads the Labour Institute, believes that Greece could generate half a point of GDP and seven thousand jobs just by restoring the minimum wage to 751 euros ($1014) a month.

 

A controversial law in February 2012 lowered it to 586 euros despite protests from the Greek business community that taxes and state bureaucracy were a far more pressing concern.

Unemployment has continued to rise, suggesting that the measure was far from successful.

 

Varoufakis doesn’t think Greece can recover if it attempts to service its debt while it remains in recession.

 

"Greek debt will remain sky high while Greece’s GDP will continue to shrink," he says.

 

He believes a new contract between Greece and the troika should make Greece’s repayment schedule "dependent only on Greece’s GDP growth rate".

 

Greece’s left wing opposition has embraced this suspension of interest payments; but Hardouvelis believes it would "strain relations with Greece’s Eurozone partners" to the point of getting it kicked out of the EU.

 

Greece is not alone in its financial asphyxiation.

 

The single currency exposed weaknesses in the competitiveness of southern European economies and helped channel investments to the north.

 

Panayotis Petrakis, an economist at Athens University, describes this unequal structure as "the new normal".

 

He divides the Eurozone into "a productive centre, which concentrates capital from the periphery, which will have 27-30 percent unemployment."

 

But Greece is singled out by the length and stubbornness of its illness.

 

Portugal, Spain and Ireland have begun to see a pickup in their exports, leading to a fresh flow of money to pay off debts.

 

Greece’s pickup has been much slower – an indication of the investor-unfriendliness it has to fix at home, and this is the nub of the problem.

 

"Suppose for twenty years we have no problem with the debt," says Hardouvelis.

 

Are we going to fix a country that generates the income that, when the time comes, enables the future rich Greeks to pay back the debt? … The question always comes back to us."

 

(Source: Al Jazeera)

 

(Al Jazeera, 21 Saturday September 2013 The Roman)

 

Merkel triumphs, but falls just shy of absolute majority

Merkel triumphs, but falls just shy of absolute majority

 

[caption id="attachment_8796" align="alignnone" width="606"]606x341_239628 (Photo euronews)[/caption]

 

Angela Merkel’s conservatives look set to fall just short of an historic absolute majority – despite their strongest performance in a German national election for more than two decades.

 

Exit polls from public broadcaster ARD showed Chancellor Merkel’s conservative bloc – which includes the Christian Democratic Union (CDU) and Bavarian Christian Social Union (CSU) – on 41.8 per cent, their best score since 1990.

 

Poll projections from ARD suggest Merkel’s conservatives are just shy of winning an absolute majority.

 

A separate projection from ZDF shows them even with the other three parties that have made it into parliament – Social Democrats (SPD), Greens and Left party.

 

The last time a German party won an absolute majority was in 1957 with conservative leader Konrad Adenauer.

 

If Merkel does need to form a coalition it’s unclear who it will be with – her current partners the Free Democrats (FDP) scored around 4.7 per cent of the vote, below the 5 per cent needed to enter parliament.

 

If the FDP fail to get into the Bundestag, Merkel could form a coalition with the SPD, who she governed with in her first term, from 2005-2009.

 

Support for SPD stood at 25.6 per cent, their second-worst result since World War Two.

 

Meanwhile newcoming eurosceptic party, Alternative for Germany , polled 4.9 per cent of the vote, a whisker short of the magic 5 per cent margin.

 

It had earlier been predicted the party would make a significant impact.

 

Merkel delight

 

“This is a super result,” said Merkel, who is now on course to eclipse Britain’s Margaret Thatcher as the EU’s longest-serving female head of government.

 

“We will do all we can in the next four years together to make them successful years for Germany. It is too early to say how we will proceed but today we should celebrate.”

 

Lena Roche, euronews’ correspondent at the CDU’s headquarters in Berlin, said the atmosphere is “bubbling with excitement.”

 

She added: “Hundreds of followers are celebrating the victory with beer, wine, currywurst and pretzel. Everytime a new projection pops up people cheer louldy.

 

“Angela Merkel appeared on stage around 9pm – the young CDU members even got her to dance a little bit.”

 

Meanwhile at the Berlin headquarters of the SPD there were cheers when it became clear the FDP were likely to be ousted from the German parliament.

 

Bad feeling remains between the two parties, after the collapse of a coalition 30 years ago, according to euronews’ correspondent at the Willy Brandt building.

 

He added: “But they may have been taking their eyes off the bigger picture – their own poor showing opened up the possibility of Merkel’s conservatives securing an absolute majority.”

 

Eurozone tensions

 

The election is of huge importance – Germany plays a crucial role in making decisions over the eurozone’s debt crisis.

 

Sunday’s election is the first in Germany since the zone’s financial problems erupted in 2009.

 

It has the biggest population in the EU and 62million are eligible to vote.

 

Carsten Koschmieder, political analyst at Berlin’s Free University, said: “If Merkel does end up with an absolute majority, it will be a very narrow majority so it will not make things easier for her politically.

 

“She will have to pay much more attention to people in her own party, for example those who voted against Greek bailouts.”

 

Mats Persson, director of think tank Open Europe, said: “Whatever happens this is a massive public endorsement for Angela Merkel, who has established herself as the most powerful female politician ever.

 

“Part of her resounding victory must also be seen as a validation of her eurozone policy – expect more of the same.

 

“Whether or not the anti-euro AfD makes it into parliament, its strong showing means it could become a force to be reckoned with in the European elections.

 

“No matter the coalition outcome, there will have to be a lot of soul searching by the FDP and centre-left. In the end the leadership of these parties could well end up paying the price for their poor showing.”

 

French president Francois Hollande congratulated Merkel, inviting her to talks in Paris once her new government is formed.

 

Hollande and Merkel had a conversation in which they expressed their wish to “pursue their close cooperation in order to take up the new challenges of Europe’s construction”.

 

Challenges ahead

 

Merkel’s Christian Democrats have ruled in a coalition with the pro-business FDP since 2009.

 

In the run-up to the election, the FDP pledged to continue in coalition with Merkel – if together they win enough votes – but its support has dropped away in recent years.

 

Regardless of her coalition, she faces major challenges in a new term, from bedding down her shift from nuclear to renewable power to fending off a demographic crisis, and setting out a vision for Europe, which may be past the acute phase of its crisis but is still plagued by recession and unemployment.

 

There is also the issue of a possible third bailout for Greece, a subject Merkel tried to keep out of her election campaign.

 

(euronews, 22 Sunday September 2013 The Roman)