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Germans overwhelmingly oppose Greek bailout - poll

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By Erik Kirschbaum

BERLIN (Reuters) - Germans overwhelmingly oppose further aid for Greece, according to opinion poll released on Sunday, one day ahead of a vote in parliament on a new Greek bailout package where Chancellor Angela Merkel may be forced to rely on opposition support.

The poll by the Emnid Institute in Bild am Sonntag newspaper found 62 percent oppose a new 130 billion rescue package while 33 percent are in favour. A similar Emnid poll in September found 53 percent opposed and 43 percent in favour.

Merkel's centre-right coalition faces a testing vote in parliament on Monday when at least a dozen deputies are expected vote against the measure. It should still pass with ease because opposition parties will vote for it.

But the prospect of the ruling bloc failing to win a majority on its own would be a humiliating setback for Merkel, with some analysts and opposition leaders warning it could endanger her coalition.

Further signs of tension in the coalition emerged on Saturday when Merkel's Interior Minister, Hans-Peter Friedrich, became the first member of her government to openly call for Greece to leave the euro zone.

Merkel's government has 330 seats in the 620-seat parliament so Merkel can afford no more than 19 rebels if she is to deliver the 311-seat majority without relying on the opposition.

In a September 27 vote, there were 15 rebels in the coalition and Merkel got 315 votes from her coalition deputies.

'RESCUE ONLY BUYS TIME'

Wolfgang Bosbach, a respected member of parliament in Merkel's Christian Democrats, told Reuters he planned to vote against the Greek rescue package on Monday because it will not help resolve Greece's lack of economic competitiveness.

"My fear is we're only buying time with this rescue package and yet will be taking on more risk," said Bosbach, who also voted against the previous measure.

"My fear is that the basic problems won't be resolved. On top of that, the drastic savings efforts that are necessary for Greece will further choke off the economy and lead to even higher unemployment."

The Emnid poll in Bild am Sonntag also found that two-thirds of Germans believe a Greek state insolvency is unavoidable and only 31 percent believe it can be averted.

Germans, who are making the largest financial contribution to the euro zone bailout to Athens, are growing increasingly impatient with what Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble recently described as a "bottomless pit" in Greece.

At the same time, there is a growing awareness in Germany, Europe's leading economy, that its own prosperity is at risk as the debt crisis sucks in other countries and stifles demand within the currency bloc for German exports.

German criticism of Greece has reopened wounds in Greece dating back to World War Two. Protesters in Athens burned a German flag earlier this month while Greek newspapers have portrayed Merkel and Schaeuble in Nazi uniform.

Merkel is opposed to Greece leaving the euro zone but her Bavarian allies, the Christian Social Union (CSU), face a difficult state vote in 2013 and have been raising the volume on calls for Greece to quit.

Yet until Friedrich's comments on Saturday none of the three CSU ministers in her 15-member cabinet had dared express that view in public. Friedrich said Greece's chances of restoring its fiscal health would be greater outside the euro.

"Greece's chances to regenerate itself and become more competitive are certainly greater outside the currency union than they are if it stays in the euro zone," Friedrich told Der Spiegel magazine. "I'm not saying that Greece should be thrown out but rather to create incentives that it can't say 'no' to."

(Reporting By Erik Kirschbaum; Editing by Robin Pomeroy)

 

4 comments

  • Heartless  •  2 months ago
    yeah and whats more i bet they are getting fed up like us as the only 2 countries that pay in while all the rest take. the #$%$ will hit the fan soon, we won't stand for it
  • Henry Goodridge  •  2 months ago
    The poll referred to in the article adequately illustrates that democracy has become meaningless in Germany.The politicians have a conflict of interest insofar as the EU means more jobs for the boys and as of a consequence should not to voting huge sums of tax money to Greece in order to keep the EU bandwagon temporarily on the road.Its time that referendums took place throughout Europe in order to determine what the electorates of the independent states want in regard to EU membership(and this includes the referendum in the UK promised by the Conservatives).Surely to promise something of such import to an electorate and then renege upon the promise once in power is tantamount to electoral fraud?
    Contact your MPs and complain that the promise which swayed your vote has not been met and demand a referendum or a general election.
    • Steve 2 months ago
      check out the web site peoplespledge dot org and force a referendum - if we can get public support then the UK might just have a chance. I no longer live there but feel for the democracy of my birth country , England. Where did it go!
  • J.  •  2 months ago
    Remind me why was Greese even let in to the EU again ?
  • KenluckyL  •  Singapore, Central Singapore  •  2 months ago
    Greece must be excluded fr eu to avoid more bleeding of euro. Let it become independent & restore its own system so that the world can recover. It hurts 4 some years, but will benefit the world after sometime and itself to gain the strength to recover.
 
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