Germany facing political limbo

Published: 19 September 2005 y., Monday

Germany's leading conservative party has fallen short of the majority of parliamentary seats needed to form a new government to replace Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder following elections Sunday.

The results left neither Angela Merkel's Christian Democrats nor Schroeder's Social Democrats in a good position to assemble a ruling coalition.

If the new parliament cannot elect a chancellor in three attempts, President Horst Koehler could appoint a minority government led by the candidate with a simple majority, AP said.

Schroeder argued Sunday that voters refused to grant Merkel a mandate to lead the country.

According to preliminary results from 298 of 299 districts, it won 35.2 percent. That gives it 225 seats in the 598-seat Bundestag, Germany's parliament -- a lower-than-expected number that makes it difficult to form a center-right coalition with the pro-business Free Democrats, who won 9.8 percent of the vote.

Schroeder's Social Democrats won 222 seats with 34.3 percent of the popular vote. The Free Democrats claimed 61 seats; Schroeder's current coalition partners, the Greens, won 8.1 percent of the vote and 51 seats; the upstart Left party won 8.7 percent, which worked out to 54 seats.

Voting in the final district, in the eastern city of Dresden, has been delayed until October 2.

Šaltinis: cnn.com
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