Current:Home > ScamsGermany’s Scholz confident of resolving budget crisis, says no dismantling of the welfare state -TradeGrid
Germany’s Scholz confident of resolving budget crisis, says no dismantling of the welfare state
View
Date:2025-04-15 22:48:13
BERLIN (AP) — German Chancellor Olaf Scholz said Saturday he is confident that his troubled government will find a good solution to a budget crisis triggered by a court ruling last month, and promised his center-left party there will be no dismantling of the country’s welfare state.
Leaders of Scholz’s three-party coalition have been wrangling over money since Germany’s highest court annulled a decision to repurpose 60 billion euros ($65 billion) originally meant to cushion the fallout from the COVID-19 pandemic for measures to help combat climate change and modernize the country.
The immediate challenge is to plug a 17 billion-euro hole in next year’s budget. Scholz, Vice Chancellor Robert Habeck and Finance Minister Christian Lindner have met repeatedly to seek to resolve the impasse, but have run out of time to get the budget through parliament before the new year starts.
The issue has added to tensions in the 2-year-old coalition, which has become notorious for infighting and has seen its poll ratings slump. The alliance brings together Scholz’s Social Democrats and Habeck’s environmentalist Greens, who also traditionally lean to the left, with Lindner’s pro-business Free Democrats.
Lindner and his party have portrayed themselves as guarantors of solid finances and adherence to Germany’s strict self-imposed limits on running up debt — the rules at the center of last month’s court ruling — and have advocated spending cuts.
Some members, along with the conservative opposition, have questioned a roughly 12% increase in unemployment benefits that is due to take effect in January. Germany’s inflation rate has now declined to 3.2% from much higher levels earlier this year.
“I want to impart confidence here that we will succeed” in finding a solution, “and that we will succeed in a way that is important for the future of this country,” Scholz told a regular convention of the Social Democrats in Berlin Saturday. “We’re not facing an insoluble task; we just all have to agree.”
“But for me it is very clear that there will be no dismantling of the welfare state in Germany in such a situation,” he told delegates, to applause.
He said it “belongs to the DNA of our country” and is “the basis of prosperity in our country that you’re not given up on without hope, but again and again get an opportunity to manage and fight for your own prospects.”
The discussion about the unemployment benefit hike is “very odd,” given that the preceding increase was small and the next one probably will be too, Scholz said. “I think we have to resist,” he added, noting that parliament had approved it with opposition support.
Recent polls have shown support for the Social Democrats languishing at just 14-16%, far behind the 25.7% with which they narrowly won Germany’s 2021 election. They trail both the conservative opposition Union bloc and the far-right Alternative for Germany.
Scholz noted that governments in Germany’s neighbors also have squabbled lately — “that doesn’t make it better ... but one must say that it can’t be a coincidence.”
veryGood! (9)
Related
- Which apps offer encrypted messaging? How to switch and what to know after feds’ warning
- A pediatrician's view on child poverty rates: 'I need policymakers to do their job'
- Baby babble isn't just goo goo! And hearing 2 languages is better than one
- How the UAW strike could have ripple effects across the economy
- Current, future North Carolina governor’s challenge of power
- Wisconsin man accused of pepper-spraying police at US Capitol on Jan. 6 pleads guilty
- North Dakota panel will reconsider denying permit for Summit CO2 pipeline
- Libya's chief prosecutor orders investigation into collapse of 2 dams amid floods
- Former Danish minister for Greenland discusses Trump's push to acquire island
- Maryland’s schools superintendent withdraws his request to extend his contract
Ranking
- The FBI should have done more to collect intelligence before the Capitol riot, watchdog finds
- The Blind Side’s Tuohy Family Says They Never Intended to Adopt Michael Oher
- Kansas to no longer change transgender people’s birth certificates to reflect gender identities
- Jets' Aaron Rodgers Shares Update After Undergoing Surgery for Torn Achilles
- Could your smelly farts help science?
- In victory for Trump, Florida GOP won’t require signing loyalty oath to run in presidential primary
- Court sentences main suspects in Belgium’s deadliest peacetime attack to 20-year to life terms
- What’s streaming now: ‘Barbie,’ Dan & Shay, ‘The Morning Show’ and ‘Welcome to Wrexham’
Recommendation
Louvre will undergo expansion and restoration project, Macron says
University of Kentucky cancer center achieves highest designation from National Cancer Institute
'Learning stage:' Vikings off to disappointing 0-2 start after loss to Eagles
Armed man arrested at RFK Jr campaign event in Los Angeles
New Mexico governor seeks funding to recycle fracking water, expand preschool, treat mental health
See Sofía Vergara's transformation into Griselda Blanco for new Netflix series: Photos
Michigan man cleared of killing 2 hunters to get $1 million for wrongful convictions
Riverdale’s Lili Reinhart Shares Update on her “Crazy” Body Dysmorphia and OCD Struggles