The Grand Coalition and a Changing Political Order: Shifting Alliances and a New Era in German Politics

Clay M. Clemens, College of William and Mary

Abstract

Since its 2005 federal election, Germany has been governed by the country's two historically strongest political rivals, the center-right Christian Democratic Union/Christian Social Union (CDU/CSU) and center-left Social Democratic Party (SPD). Despite initial hope in some quarters that this broad-based Grand Coalition under Chancellor Angela Merkel could overcome partisan gridlock and enact major policy changes, seeking to work together has only fed frictions within as well between both partners. A resulting stalemate has reinforced the more skeptical view that this government was in fact destined to remain at most a transitional one. It only came about in the first place due to an increasing fractionalization of the party system, as the declining core support for CDU/CSU and SPD boosted several smaller contenders, yet also denied either of two more familiar federal alliances--center-right (CDU/CSU-Liberal) or center-left (SPD-Green)--a clear parliamentary majority. There is thus widespread and mounting speculation that Germany's next national election will produce a wholly new governing constellation, one based on multiple parties, perhaps one crossing all traditional bloc divisions, or possibly one drawn entirely from the left; Germany might conceivably even enter a phase of minority government. While to be sure all such scenarios remain hypothetical, the Federal Republic does seem poised on the edge of a new political era.

Recommended Citation

Clemens, Clay M. (2007) "The Grand Coalition and a Changing Political Order: Shifting Alliances and a New Era in German Politics," The Forum: Vol. 5 : Iss. 3, Article 5.
Available at: http://www.bepress.com/forum/vol5/iss3/art5

 
 
 
 

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