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German political parties summarize exploratory negotiations, alliance negotiations begin

After the February 23 election, the German political party took the first step after the first step on Sunday, after the end of Sunday’s first step.

Conservative group leader Friedrich Merz is seen as Germany’s next prime minister, and Social Democratic leader Lars Klingbeil made the announcement in Berlin.

Meles, head of the CDU/CSU conservative group, said an agreement has been reached on a series of substantive issues. Joint papers should be the basis for alliance negotiations and can be started next week if necessary.

Meles said the two sides agreed to apply for asylum on the land border in the future – but only coordinated with neighboring countries.

In addition, the Christian Democratic Union (CDU) and the Sister Party and SPD of the Bavarian Christian Social Union (CSU) only plan to reduce electricity bills to reduce the burden on companies and private families.

If the Party Committee agrees, it can start working on the “Union Agreement”. This will include eliminating which parties the new government wants to solve, and which party gets which department.

Merz sets the goal of negotiating through Easter.

CDU/CSU will win parliamentary elections on February 23 as 28.5%. SPD ranked third with a score of 16.4%, behind Germany’s far-right alternative, which had a 20.8% rate.

There is no majority in the alliance between the CDU and the Greens, and the CDU clearly ruled out cooperation with the AFD.

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