BERLIN: One month away from a national election, Germany’s Social Democrats are struggling in their efforts to narrow a yawning gap in support behind Chancellor Angela Merkel’s conservatives.
The left-leaning Social Democratic Party (SPD) is languishing on around 24 percent support, polls show, far behind Merkel’s conservatives bloc, on some 38 percent. Germans go to the polls on Sept. 24.
The SPD is having difficulty in differentiating itself from the conservatives, with whom it rules as junior partner in a ‘grand coalition’ — an alliance the party wants to avoid repeating, but which polls suggest is the only partnership that can guarantee a majority.
“We need to get more emotional, to fight and force Merkel to speak in clear terms so that the differences become clear,” SPD Labor Minister Andrea Nahles told business daily Handelsblatt.
Nahles accused Merkel, who is campaigning for a fourth term on a platform of economic stability, of trying to cruise through the election without staking out clear positions.
Last year, Germany’s refugee crisis threatened Merkel. But with the migrant flow now stemmed and unemployment at a record low, she is able to project herself as an anchor of stability in an uncertain world.
Trying to rock her, SPD leader Martin Schulz has grown increasingly critical of Merkel this week, accusing her of blocking his party’s efforts in the ruling coalition to win better pay for temporary workers and improve workers’ rights.
On Thursday, Schulz takes his campaign to Essen, in the heart of the Ruhr area of North Rhine-Westphalia that was at the center of Germany’s post-war ‘economic miracle’ but which is now a rust-belt.
Germany’s most populous state, North Rhine-Westphalia has traditionally been an SPD stronghold but the party lost there in a state election in May — one of three regional votes Merkel’s conservatives won earlier this year.
Schulz, 61, led the SPD to a brief poll surge after the party selected him as leader at the start of the year. But the revival quickly fizzled as his campaign for ‘social justice’ failed to gain traction.
A former European Parliament president, he cannot match the clout of Merkel, 63, gained in 12 years of experience as leader of Europe’s biggest economy.
Searching for another point of difference, Schulz pledged on Tuesday to have US nuclear weapons withdrawn from German territory if, against the odds, he defeats Merkel.
“Schulz’s election campaign is jumping around so many areas that it is impossible to discern a theme,” the daily Sueddeutsche Zeitung wrote in an editorial.
Striking a defeatist note, Schulz said earlier this month he wanted to stay on as SPD leader even if his party loses the election.
‘Let’s get emotional,’ says Germany’s Social Democrats, struggling to oust Merkel
‘Let’s get emotional,’ says Germany’s Social Democrats, struggling to oust Merkel
Hundreds feared missing or dead trying to cross the Mediterranean, says UN migration agency
- Survivors from the same boat said another vessel departed simultaneously but never arrived and its fate remains unknown, the IOM said
GENEVA: Hundreds of people are feared dead or missing after attempting to cross the Mediterranean Sea, with reports of multiple shipwrecks in the last ten days following bad weather, the UN migration agency said on Monday.
“The final toll may be significantly higher, a stark reminder that this route remains the deadliest migration corridor in the world,” the IOM stated.
Three people — including twin girls about one year old — were confirmed dead in Lampedusa, Italy, after a search-and-rescue operation for a boat that left Sfax, Tunisia, the International Organization for Migration said in a statement. They died of hypothermia, according to their Guinean mother, a survivor. A man also died from the same cause, the IOM added.
Survivors from the same boat said another vessel departed simultaneously but never arrived and its fate remains unknown, the IOM said.
Over the past 10 days — amid a violent Mediterranean storm triggered by Cyclone Harry — several boats are believed to have gone missing, leaving hundreds unaccounted for, according to the IOM. Search efforts have been hampered by poor weather.
The agency is verifying a survivor’s report from another boat, rescued by a commercial vessel near Malta, of a shipwreck where at least 50 people could be missing or dead. Separately, 51 people are feared dead after a wreck off Tobruk, Libya, the IOM said.
“Smuggling migrants on unseaworthy and overcrowded boats is a criminal act,” the IOM said.
“Arranging departures while a severe storm was hitting the region makes this conduct even more reprehensible, as people were knowingly sent to sea under conditions amounting to a near-certain risk of death,” it added.
In 2025, at least 1,340 people died in the Central Mediterranean, according to the agency’s figures.








