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...difficulties of integrating East Germany caught up with the Federal Republic. At present unemployment has reached nearly 12 percent of the workforce, or five million people. The CDU offered up a new candidate with a project of painful-but-healthy reform. Germany could either give the much-hyped Angela Merkel a mandate, or it would reconfirm its distrust of Anglo-Saxon-style liberalism and continue to adhere to the continental social-democratic model, permitting the incumbent chancellor Gerhard Schrder to sally on. In the event, such a choice proved too much for the Germans, and today the countrys direction remains...

Author: By Alexander Bevilacqua, | Title: Quo Vadis, Germania? | 10/4/2005 | See Source »

...Despite losing the battle, those opposed to Turkey's membership may yet win the war. The likely next German chancellor, Angela Merkel, has long argued for something short of full membership for Turkey. And French president Jacques Chirac, who says he favors Turkish membership, has pressed through a constitutional amendment demanding a referendum in France to approve any new member of the EU. An editorial in Germany's centrist Sueddeutsche Zeitung sensed a whiff of hypocrisy in the pressure on Austria to kick the ball forward again. "The Austrian government deserves merit for speaking openly what a majority...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Europe's Reluctant Embrace of Turkey Shadows Talks | 10/3/2005 | See Source »

...Aiming for the Top Angela Merkel's bid for Germany's chancellorship (Aug. 29) was just the latest attempt by a woman to win a country's top elected position. And when the subject of a woman in the top job comes up, the person most talked about is Margaret Thatcher, who was on TIME's cover of May 14, 1979, when she became Britain's first female Prime Minister. Here is an excerpt from that report...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Letters | 9/26/2005 | See Source »

...that nobody wins. It is tempting to compare Germany '05 with the U.S. presidential election in Florida five years ago, but wrong. In Florida, after much counting and recounting, somebody won?George W. Bush. Yet in Germany, Gerhard Schr?der, the Social Democrat, was trounced?and so was Angela Merkel, his Christian-Democratic challenger. The Chancellor and his junior partner, the Greens, lost their majority, but Frau Merkel and her allies, the Free Democrats (FDP), did not gain one. The Social Democrat-Green coalition was out, but the center-right...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: How to Change Without a Revolution | 9/26/2005 | See Source »

...govern Germany for the next four years. Theoretically, the Social Democrat-Green coalition could recruit the FDP. But the party's chairman insists that he won't get into bed with Schr?der's Social Democrats and Joschka Fischer's Greens. On the right side of the political divide, Merkel could try to pry the Greens out of Schr?der's embrace. Arithmetically, this is a fetching idea; ideologically, it is not. How would she harness her own Conservatives, the free-market FDP and the leftish environmentalists of the Green Party in a stable m?nage ? trois? What about a grand coalition...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: How to Change Without a Revolution | 9/26/2005 | See Source »

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