Good morning from Berlin. As Germany heads towards snap elections in February, sparked by the breakdown of the ruling coalition, incumbent social democrat Chancellor Olaf Scholz (SPD) and the frontrunner to succeed him, Friedrich Merz of the Christian Democrats (CDU/CSU), are laying their cards on the table. Since mid-2022, CDU/CSU has been steadily leading polls, followed by the far-right AfD, with SPD in third place. As projections for the return of a grand coalition are gaining ground, the revival of the German economy and a stricter stance on migration top the agendas of both parties. As Scholz warned about a “tough” economic situation, the announced measures are focused on a national level, and signals that Germany is looking to integrate measures into wider European ones are missing. This approach contradicts the much-discussed need for EU coordination to increase the bloc’s competitiveness based on Mario Draghi’s report. Europe is left hoping for spill-over effects from a German recovery, as the negative impact of its downturn has also been widely felt, writes Euractiv’s Nick Alipour. |