German chancellor and head of the Christian Democrats, Angela Merkel, speaks to journalists in Berlin, Germany, Sunday, Feb. 4, 2018. Chancellor Angela Merkel's conservatives and the center-left Social Democrats embarked Sunday on what they hope is their last round of talks on forming a new German government, although the negotiations could take up to two more days.
German chancellor and head of the Christian Democrats, Angela Merkel, speaks to journalists in Berlin, Germany, Sunday, Feb. 4, 2018. Chancellor Angela Merkel's conservatives and the center-left Social Democrats embarked Sunday on what they hope is their last round of talks on forming a new German government, although the negotiations could take up to two more days. dpa via AP Kay Nietfeld
German chancellor and head of the Christian Democrats, Angela Merkel, speaks to journalists in Berlin, Germany, Sunday, Feb. 4, 2018. Chancellor Angela Merkel's conservatives and the center-left Social Democrats embarked Sunday on what they hope is their last round of talks on forming a new German government, although the negotiations could take up to two more days. dpa via AP Kay Nietfeld

German parties resume push for coalition government deal

February 05, 2018 03:53 AM

The prospective partners in Germany's new government resumed their push to nail down a coalition deal on Monday, but it was unclear whether they would clinch an agreement before the day is over.

Chancellor Angela Merkel's conservative Union bloc and the center-left Social Democrats originally set a Sunday deadline to wrap up talks on extending their alliance of the past four years, but budgeted two extra days as a precaution when formal negotiations started Jan. 26.

Still on the table are two points that are important to the Social Democrats: curbing the use of temporary work contracts and trying to narrow differences between Germany's public and private health insurance systems.

"I assume that we can get this finally done today," Volker Bouffier, a deputy leader of Merkel's Christian Democratic Union, told reporters as he arrived for the talks. "I'm not certain, but confident. We may need until early tomorrow."

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Germany's effort to put together a governing coalition after its Sept. 24 election is already its longest since World War II.

It won't finish with these talks. A deal will have to be approved in a ballot of the Social Democrats' members, many of whom are skeptical after a disastrous election result. That process will take a few weeks.

Merkel's attempt to put together a government with two smaller parties collapsed in November. Social Democrat leader Martin Schulz, who had previously ruled out renewing the "grand coalition" of Germany's biggest parties, then reversed course.

Failure to reach an agreement, or a deal's rejection by Social Democrat members, would leave a minority government under Merkel or a new election as the only viable governing options.