THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
September 20, 2021 at 18:45 JST
Olaf Scholz, candidate for chancellor of the SPD and Federal Minister of Finance, left, Annalena Baerbock, German Green Party co-leader and candidate for chancellor, center, and Armin Laschet, candidate for chancellor of the CDU/CSU and chairman of the CDU, right, stand together before the start of the third TV debate in Berlin, Sunday Sept. 19, 2021. (dpa via AP)
FRANKFURT, Germany--The three candidates bidding to succeed Angela Merkel as German chancellor clashed over taxes and pocketbook issues in a third televised debate Sunday a week before the election.
Social Democrat Olaf Scholz, the leader in the polls, fended off attacks on his minimum wage and tax plan from the candidate for Merkel's center-right party, Armin Laschet.
Laschet, who polls suggest needs to make up several percentage points if he hopes to lead the next government, attacked Scholz's plans for a 12-euro minimum wage and tax increases for the more affluent, saying more taxes was “the wrong signal."
Scholz, the current vice chancellor and finance minister in a coalition with Merkel and Laschet's party, maintained his trademark low-key demeanor as he outlined plans to relieve burdens on lower income earners while “someone who earns as much as I do pays a bit more in taxes.”
Greens Party candidate Annalena Baerbock, whose opposition party is running third in polls ahead of next Sunday's election, urged benefits changes to reduce child poverty.
She also advocated an earlier exit from coal as a source of electricity, saying the current government had not done enough to limit climate change and a “new start” was needed. “The next government must be a climate government,” she said.
Despite needing to overtake Scholz, Laschet, the governor of the North-Rhine Westphalia region, had his sharpest exchanges with Baerbock while Scholz at times seemed content to let the other two go at each other, at one point nodding as if in agreement with Baerbock, a potential coalition partner.
The close race and number of parties with significant support means the next government will be determined by post-election coalition negotiations between at least two and more likely three parties.
The current right-left coalition of Merkel's conservatives and the Social Democrats remains a possibility, but far from the only one. Among several others one result could be the Social Democrats and the Greens plus the smaller pro-business Free Democrats, or an all-left coalition government of Social Democrats, Greens and the Left, a smaller party to the left of the Social Democrats.
Merkel, chancellor since 2005, is not seeking a fifth, four-year term.
A final debate on Thursday will include representatives of all the parties currently in parliament, not just the three candidates considered candidates for chancellor.
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