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Angela Merkel Wins Fourth Term as German Chancellor

Merkel's conservative bloc won 32.9% of the vote, down 8.6 points from the 2013 election, hitting its lowest level since 1949.

Berlin: Germany’s Angela Merkel turns to the complex task of sounding out partners in a potentially fragile coalition after securing a fourth term as chancellor in Sunday’s election even though her conservatives bled support to the far-right.

Damaged by her handling of the 2015 migrant crisis, Merkel’s conservative bloc won 32.9% of the vote, down 8.6 points from the 2013 election and hitting its lowest level since 1949.

However, hers was still the biggest parliamentary bloc and Europe’s most powerful leader stressed that as the strongest party, her conservatives have the mandate to form the next government.

“There cannot be a coalition government built against us,” she said, adding she was sure there would be a stable government by Christmas.

Party leaders, Katja Kipping, Joerg Meuthen, Joachim Herrmann, Chancellor Angela Merkel, TV host Rainald Becker, host Peter Frey, Martin Schulz, Christian Lindner and Katrin Goering-Eckardt attend a TV chat show in Berlin, Germany, September 24, 2017. Credit: Reuters

Party leaders, Katja Kipping, Joerg Meuthen, Joachim Herrmann, Chancellor Angela Merkel, TV host Rainald Becker, host Peter Frey, Martin Schulz, Christian Lindner and Katrin Goering-Eckardt attend a TV chat show in Berlin, Germany, September 24, 2017. Credit: Reuters

However, a complicated and potentially unstable three-way coalition with the pro-business Free Democrats (FDP) and Greens, untested at the national level, with a weaker Merkel could unsettle investors.

The euro slipped in early Asian trading on Monday trading down 0.4% at $1.1906, with the prospect of months of uncertainty in Europe’s biggest economy looming.

One of the biggest shocks was the strength of the Alternative for Germany (AfD) which won 13.0% of the vote. It was the first time a far-right party entered the German parliament in more than half a century.

Some business leaders were alarmed, saying a party likened by the foreign minister to Nazis could hurt Germany.

“The AfD in the German Bundestag (parliament) is damaging our country,” employers’ association BDA leader Ingo Kramer said. “The other parties now have the task of cornering the AfD in direct parliamentary debate.”

One of the AfD’s leading candidates, Alexander Gauland, gave a foretaste of what is to come, vowing to “hound” Merkel and “get our country and our people back”.

Industry leaders urged Merkel to move fast.

“Our companies need clear signals. Now it’s all about averting damage to Germany as a place of business,” Dieter Kempf, president of the BDI industry association, said.

After her current Social Democrat (SPD) coalition partner, said it would go into opposition after slumping to a post-war low of 20.6%, Merkel’s main option is to pursue a three-way partnership.

A “Jamaica” alliance of her conservative bloc, the FDP, on 10.6%, and the Greens, on 8.9%, could be fragile due to fundamental differences on issues from migrants to tax and Europe.

In particular, a weakened Merkel who has to share power with the FDP is likely to create problems for deeper integration of the euro zone as suggested by French President Emmanuel Macron.

Final results are due early on Monday and during the day, parties will meet and hold news conferences.

(Reuters)