Tuesday, October 29, 2013

GERMANY'S MAJOR POLITICAL PARTIES HAVE NOT ONLY REACHED COMPROMISE ON THE PREVIOUSLY DISPUTED MAJOR POLITICAL ISSUES, BUT HAVE EMBRACED EACH OTHER ON THE COUNTRY'S FINANCE POLICY FOR THE EVENTUAL FORMATION OF BIGGER AND STRONGER COALITION GOVERNMENT.

GERMANY'S MAJOR POLITICAL PARTIES HAVE NOT ONLY REACHED COMPROMISE ON THE PREVIOUSLY DISPUTED MAJOR POLITICAL ISSUES, BUT HAVE EMBRACED EACH OTHER ON THE COUNTRY'S FINANCE POLICY FOR THE EVENTUAL FORMATION OF BIGGER AND STRONGER COALITION GOVERNMENT.

      Germany's major Political Parties that comprised of the CDU, the CSU and the SPD have not only reached compromise on the previously disputed major political issues that entailed minimum wage, taxation, immigration, particularly on the refugees, political asylum and illegale immigration issues, besides the required investment in the education and infrastructures, but have embraced each other on the country's finance policy which eventually may result in faster formation of the country's biggest and stronger coalition government of all time with majority in the Parliament and absolute ruling power with Chancellor Angela Merkel as the highest Executive, or President in office and the SPD Chief Gabriel Mappos as the vice Executive, or vice President in the country's highest office in Germany's capital Belin. However, criticism of the government's absolute ruling power in the Parliament with stable and democratic system of governance has not gained citizens support in protest, or by demonstration, instead the citizens have overwhelmingly voted for the formation of the bigger coalition government with absolute power in both the Parliament called the Bundestag and the upper House called the Bundesrat.

                                           Written by Professor Godfrey Ohia.

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