(11 Dec 2024)
RESTRICTION SUMMARY:
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Berlin – 11 December 2024
++PART MUTE++
1. German Chancellor Olaf Scholz arriving ++MUTE++
2. SOUNDBITE (German) Olaf Scholz, German Chancellor:
"I have just applied to the president of the parliament for a vote in accordance with Article 68 of the Basic Law. In doing so, I would like to clear the way for early German elections. I will explain my motion in detail in the German parliament next Monday. If the lawmakers then take the path I have proposed, I will propose to Federal President Steinmeier on Monday afternoon that the Bundestag be dissolved. If the Federal President follows my proposal, the voters will be able to elect a new parliament on February 23."
3. Various of briefing ++MUTE++
4. Scholz leaving ++MUTE++
STORYLINE:
Chancellor Olaf Scholz formally set Germany on course for an early election Wednesday by requesting a confidence vote in parliament next week.
Five weeks after his three-party governing coalition collapsed in a dispute over how to revitalize Germany’s stagnant economy, Scholz’s office said he had requested the confidence vote in parliament’s lower house, or Bundestag, for Monday. The aim is to hold a parliamentary election on Feb. 23, seven months earlier than originally scheduled.
Scholz is expected to lose Monday’s vote. His center-left Social Democrats hold 207 seats in the Bundestag and their remaining coalition partners, the environmentalist Greens, have 117. That leaves his government well short of a majority in the 733-seat chamber.
The confidence vote is needed because Germany’s post-World War II constitution doesn’t allow parliament to dissolve itself. If Scholz loses the vote, it’s up to President Frank-Walter Steinmeier to decide whether to dissolve the Bundestag. He has 21 days to make that decision, and once parliament is dissolved, the election must be held within 60 days.
Polls show Scholz’s party trailing behind the main opposition center-right Union bloc of challenger Friedrich Merz. Vice Chancellor Robert Habeck, whose Greens are further behind, is also bidding for the top job.
The far-right Alternative for Germany, which is polling strongly, has nominated Alice Weidel as its candidate for chancellor but has no chance of taking the job because other parties refuse to work with it.
Germany hasn’t had a confidence vote since 2005, when then-Chancellor Gerhard Schröder called and lost one as he engineered an early election that was narrowly won by center-right challenger Angela Merkel.
AP Video shot by Pietro De Cristofaro
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