German Chancellor Angela Merkel’s struggling center-left election rival, Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier, succeeded in scoring points in their only televised debate ahead of the Sept. 27 poll, commentators said yesterday.
Surveys carried out by three television stations after Sunday night’s duel found that viewers rated it a virtual draw, with two putting Steinmeier marginally ahead and one giving a slight advantage to the conservative Merkel.
The debate, like much of the campaign, lacked passion and personal attacks between the rivals, who are partners in the “grand coalition” government — the result of an indecisive 2005 election.
PHOTO: AFP
Steinmeier, a Social Democrat, is Merkel’s foreign minister and vice chancellor. His party, which trails badly in polls, aims to thwart Merkel’s hopes of forming a new center-right government of her Christian Democratic Union and the opposition, pro-business Free Democrats.
The mass-circulation Das Bild daily chose an unflattering variation on US President Barack Obama’s campaign slogan for its front-page headline: “Yes, we gähn,” or “Yes, we yawn.”
“This discussion was a signal that neither Merkel nor Steinmeier would have anything against the ‘grand coalition’ being continued,” it said in a commentary.
It noted, however, that “underdog Steinmeier succeeded a few times in making clear that there are differences” between the two.
Eckhard Jesse, a political analyst from the Technical University of Chemnitz, said that Steinmeier did better than expected, “but that’s no surprise” given that expectations of the challenger were low.
“It was a draw,” he told MDR Info radio. “I can’t imagine that very many voters will change their opinion because of such a well-mannered duel.”
Steinmeier “did better than some had expected,” the daily Süddeutsche Zeitung commented. “But on the whole, Angela Merkel was able to use the advantage of the incumbent.”
Both big parties tried to claim an advantage.
“Steinmeier won because he was clearer; Merkel tried to swim through it ... but she didn’t succeed, and so the race is now a bit more open,” Social Democrats Secretary-General Hubertus Heil told n-tv. “Steinmeier scored points above all where it is most important — among people who haven’t yet decided whom to vote for.”
Heil’s CDU counterpart, Ronald Pofalla, argued that Merkel preserved her advantage over Steinmeier and “she is yesterday evening’s winner.”
“Steinmeier has no chance of becoming chancellor, and so people who want a stable government must support Angela Merkel,” Pofalla said.
Overall election polls give Merkel’s CDU and its Bavarian sister party, the Christian Social Union, a lead of 12 points or more over the Social Democrats.
They show a majority, though not a big one, for a center-right alliance.
Merkel argued the country needs a new government to boost Europe’s biggest economy and create more jobs as Germany emerges from recession. She said tax relief would help create growth, and she dismissed Steinmeier’s calls for a national minimum wage.
Steinmeier, who is campaigning for elected office for the first time, portrayed himself as a champion of “social balance” and said a shift to the right would mean a growing gap between rich and poor.
He said tax cuts aren’t feasible and defended a plan to shut down all Germany’s 17 nuclear power plants by 2021. Merkel wants to extend some plants’ lives.
PARLIAMENT CHAOS: Police forcibly removed Brazilian Deputy Glauber Braga after he called the legislation part of a ‘coup offensive’ and occupied the speaker’s chair Brazil’s lower house of Congress early yesterday approved a bill that could slash former Brazilian president Jair Bolsonaro’s prison sentence for plotting a coup, after efforts by a lawmaker to disrupt the proceedings sparked chaos in parliament. Bolsonaro has been serving a 27-year term since last month after his conviction for a scheme to stop Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva from taking office after the 2022 election. Lawmakers had been discussing a bill that would significantly reduce sentences for several crimes, including attempting a coup d’etat — opening up the prospect that Bolsonaro, 70, could have his sentence cut to
A powerful magnitude 7.6 earthquake shook Japan’s northeast region late on Monday, prompting tsunami warnings and orders for residents to evacuate. A tsunami as high as three metres (10 feet) could hit Japan’s northeastern coast after an earthquake with an estimated magnitude of 7.6 occurred offshore at 11:15 p.m. (1415 GMT), the Japan Meteorological Agency (JMA) said. Tsunami warnings were issued for the prefectures of Hokkaido, Aomori and Iwate, and a tsunami of 40cm had been observed at Aomori’s Mutsu Ogawara and Hokkaido’s Urakawa ports before midnight, JMA said. The epicentre of the quake was 80 km (50 miles) off the coast of
China yesterday held a low-key memorial ceremony for the 1937 Nanjing Massacre, with Chinese President Xi Jinping (習近平) not attending, despite a diplomatic crisis between Beijing and Tokyo over Taiwan. Beijing has raged at Tokyo since Japanese Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi last month said that a hypothetical Chinese attack on Taiwan could trigger a military response from Japan. China and Japan have long sparred over their painful history. China consistently reminds its people of the 1937 Nanjing Massacre, in which it says Japanese troops killed 300,000 people in what was then its capital. A post-World War II Allied tribunal put the death toll
A passerby could hear the cacophony from miles away in the Argentine capital, the unmistakable sound of 2,397 dogs barking — and breaking the unofficial world record for the largest-ever gathering of golden retrievers. Excitement pulsed through Bosques de Palermo, a sprawling park in Buenos Aires, as golden retriever-owners from all over Argentina transformed the park’s grassy expanse into a sea of bright yellow fur. Dog owners of all ages, their clothes covered in dog hair and stained with slobber, plopped down on picnic blankets with their beloved goldens to take in the surreal sight of so many other, exceptionally similar-looking ones.