Germany's conservatives at Friedrich Merz achieved a deal with the Social Democrats to run the largest economy in Europe, five months after the previous government collapsed.
69 -year -old Mertz said the deal sent them a “strong and clear signal” to the Germans and the EU that Germany “would receive a strong government capable of action.”
The two sides were under intense pressure to put an end to the political limb of Germany, as the Christian Democrats of Merz won the Federal elections in February.
Germany has been accumulated by economic turbulence caused by President Donald Trump's trade rates, and recent public opinion studies suggest that the ultimate, anti -migration alternative for Germany has now outpaced the Mertz Party.
The 69-year-old Merz may have to wait until next month the new parliament to choose him as chancellor, but there should be no problem with the majority of 13 seats.
By announcing the Coalition deal, he said the parties have worked very hard in the last few weeks, but “we have a strong plan to bring our country to the fore.”
Mertz promised that the next government would reform and stabilize Germany and that the rest of Europe would be able to rely on the country.
The parties had already signaled their emergency last month, when they went through a significant reform of the strict rules of German debt.
The changes will mean that the new government will be able to invest significant investments in the country's military and destroyed infrastructure.
The agreement includes a series of measures to control irregular migration, one of the great concerns of the voters in the February elections.
Mertz said he was confident that the coalition transaction would be approved by their respective parties and that they would be able to start working in early May.
Meanwhile, IPSOS poll on Wednesday put Mertz conservatives in the second place in 24% support, a point behind the Alternative to Germany (AFD), whose co-leader Alice Widdel welcomed the study as unprecedented and promised that “political change” would come.