Germany’s Coalition Talks Enter Final Stretch with Major Policy Divides Unresolved
CDU/CSU and SPD aim to finalize an agreement by Easter, as disputes over taxes, migration, pensions, and climate policy persist.
- A 19-member negotiation team, including party leaders Friedrich Merz, Markus Söder, Lars Klingbeil, and Saskia Esken, is addressing unresolved issues in coalition talks.
- Key sticking points include corporate tax reform, with CDU/CSU advocating cuts by 2026 and SPD favoring minimal adjustments by 2029.
- The parties remain divided on migration policies, particularly border asylum rejections and conducting asylum procedures outside the EU.
- Disagreements on pensions persist, with SPD supporting the current 48% level while CDU/CSU propose increasing required contribution years to 47.
- Climate policy remains contentious, with CDU/CSU opposing the EU’s 2035 combustion engine ban and SPD supporting a transition to zero-emission vehicles.