NewsScholz faces pivotal confidence vote as Germany eyes elections

Scholz faces pivotal confidence vote as Germany eyes elections

On Monday, a roll-call vote on the vote of confidence for Chancellor Olaf Scholz will take place in the Bundestag. It will be preceded by an address from the head of the government and a discussion. The debate is scheduled to start at 12:00 PM Greenwich Time.

On Monday, the Bundestag will conduct a nominal vote of confidence for Chancellor Olaf Scholz.
On Monday, the Bundestag will conduct a nominal vote of confidence for Chancellor Olaf Scholz.
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Katarzyna Kalus

The Chancellor is counting on the parliament rejecting the motion, which would allow for early elections. If Scholz, as planned, loses the vote, he will ask the President of Germany to dissolve the parliament. Frank-Walter Steinmeier will then have 21 days to make a decision.

The President had previously signalled readiness to end the Bundestag's term. The accelerated elections are to be held on 23rd February.

Scholz's decision is an attempt to break the deadlock caused by the removal in early November of Finance Minister Christian Lindner from the Free Democratic Party (FDP) from the coalition government.

The downfall of the cabinet was caused by a difference of opinion between the SPD and the Greens versus the FDP regarding the size of the budget deficit and ways of financing it. The FDP's exit from the coalition led to the government losing its majority. Initially, Scholz intended to wait with the motion for confidence until next year, but opposition pressure prompted him to act sooner.

In the polls, the largest opposition bloc, the CDU/CSU with Friedrich Merz as the chancellor candidate, currently has a decisive lead. For months, support for the two Christian Democratic parties has fluctuated between 30 to 34 per cent, while the SPD garners support from 15 to 18 per cent of voters. The Greens enjoy support ranging from 10 to 14 per cent of the electorate, while the FDP hovers around the 5 per cent electoral threshold.

According to polls, the second strongest party in Germany is the Alternative for Germany (AfD), but all other parties exclude cooperation with this right-wing populist and pro-Russian group.

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