Coalition leaders inform on results of consultations

The leaders of Germany's CDU, CSU, and SPD coalition announced the results of their overnight consultations in the Federal Chancellery on Thursday morning. Topics included looming increases in health insurance contributions, infrastructure expansion, and pension reforms. The party heads highlighted progress on several contentious issues.

Chancellor Friedrich Merz (CDU) and coalition leaders Bärbel Bas and Lars Klingbeil (both SPD) and Markus Söder (CSU) briefed the public at 8:45 a.m. on the outcomes of a five-hour meeting in the Federal Chancellery. The consultations began the previous evening without any leaks. The agenda covered sensitive issues such as rising health insurance contributions due to a revenue-expenditure shortfall, as warned by health funds and associations.

A savings law to curb costs, particularly in hospitals, is stalled in the mediation committee. Health Minister Nina Warken (CDU) proposes cuts that face resistance from the states. The government had promised stable contributions. The planned Bürgergeld reform is set for cabinet next week, with ongoing disputes over full sanctions for non-cooperators.

The heating law, amending the Building Energy Act, requires new heaters to operate on at least 65 percent renewable energy. The exact stringency remains debated, with short-term solutions unlikely. In infrastructure, Transport Minister Patrick Schnieder (CDU) aims to classify more projects as 'overriding public interest' to speed up expansions of roads, rails, and waterways. SPD-led environment and finance ministries call for further talks.

On pension reforms, following the securing of the statutory pension level, improvements to the Riester pension are next. A pension commission is to be established mid-next week to discuss comprehensive changes across statutory, occupational, and private pillars, including retirement age and financing.

Artículos relacionados

German coalition leaders, including Chancellor Merz, discuss 2026 resilience masterplan at Berlin meeting, focusing on protecting critical infrastructure post-power attack.
Imagen generada por IA

German coalition plans year of action for 2026

Reportado por IA Imagen generada por IA

The leaders of CDU, CSU, and SPD have declared 2026 the 'year of getting down to business' in their first coalition committee meeting this year and presented a masterplan for greater resilience. The focus is on protecting critical infrastructure following an attack on Berlin's power supply. Chancellor Friedrich Merz emphasized that security takes precedence over transparency.

The leaders of CDU/CSU and SPD held a three-and-a-half-hour coalition committee meeting on budget, climate protection, and other topics, without making concrete decisions. The session at the Chancellery took place confidentially, skipping the usual press conference. Progress was reported on the climate protection program, while issues like fuel prices had already been addressed by the cabinet.

Reportado por IA

Following recent coalition consultations, Federal Health Minister Nina Warken expressed optimism about her savings package to ease pressure on health insurance funds. The mediation committee meets on December 17 to resolve the stalled law, averting potential contribution hikes for millions in 2026.

The black-red coalition has agreed on key points for reforming the heating law and scrapped the controversial 65 percent rule for renewable energies. Instead, oil and gas heaters will be allowed with increasing shares of green fuels. Environmental groups and the Greens criticize the changes as a setback for climate protection.

Reportado por IA

The CDU showed great unity at its 38th federal party congress in Stuttgart, confirming Chancellor and party leader Friedrich Merz with 91.2 percent. Despite government challenges, the party avoided confrontations with coalition partner SPD. General Secretary Carsten Linnemann also received a strong result with 90.5 percent.

The CDU held its first major federal party congress since the election in Stuttgart over the weekend. Poll numbers for Chancellor Friedrich Merz and the Union are currently poor. There is criticism within the party about Merz's leadership.

Reportado por IA

In Saxony-Anhalt, the coalition parties CDU, SPD, and FDP have approved the early transition from Minister President Reiner Haseloff to Sven Schulze. The 71-year-old Haseloff seeks to continue the black-red-yellow coalition without changes to ministry distributions. The aim is to give Schulze an incumbency advantage ahead of the 2026 state election.

 

 

 

Este sitio web utiliza cookies

Utilizamos cookies para análisis con el fin de mejorar nuestro sitio. Lee nuestra política de privacidad para más información.
Rechazar