Sunday, 1 September 2013

Merkel battles rival in TV debate

Source BBC News@ tienganhvui.com


Posters of Chancellor Angela Merkel and Peer Steinbrueck in BerlinThe two leaders worked together in a coalition after elections in 2005


German Chancellor Angela Merkel and centre-left election rival Peer Steinbrueck are due to take part in their only televised election debate.


The event is seen as the Social Democrat (SPD) leader's biggest chance to claw back Mrs Merkel's lead in the opinion polls before this month's vote.


Although the chancellor's conservative bloc is expected to win, her coalition partners are faring poorly.


The 90-minute debate starts at 18:30 GMT and will be aired on main channels.


With three weeks to go before the 22 September vote, the two candidates will be grilled by four journalists before an estimated TV audience of up to 20 million.


Peer Steinbrueck will face the first question and Angela Merkel will have the final answer, with each answer limited to 90 seconds.


So far, there have been few campaign issues that have exposed major policy differences between the two figures and the parties have focused on their personalities.


Mr Steinbrueck is often witty but prone to gaffes, while Mrs Merkel often seems less than comfortable in the cut and thrust of live debate, the BBC's Berlin correspondent Stephen Evans reports.


TV studio in BerlinThe candidates will be interviewed by four journalists


The TV duel may shift enough opinion to alter the election result, he says.


Mr Steinbrueck, 66, served as finance minister under Chancellor Merkel when his SPD party was in a "grand" coalition with her Christian Democrat (CDU) after the 2005 election. But he has refused to enter a similar power-sharing deal.


The pro-business Free Democrats (FDP), currently part of the coalition, are widely expected to perform badly in the polls.


However, an opinion poll on Friday gave Mrs Merkel's conservative bloc 41% of the vote, which might enable her to stay in power with the FDP. Mr Steinbrueck's Social Democrats were trailing on 26%.


If Mr Steinbrueck does narrow the gap, Mrs Merkel, 59, is likely to remain chancellor but the two parties would be forced to consider rebuilding a coalition.





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