BERLIN (Reuters) – Germany’s conservatives plan to rule out tax hikes in their election manifesto, a draft obtained by Reuters showed, aligning them with their preferred liberal coalition partners and distinguishing them from their main rivals.
The conservative alliance of the Christian Democrats (CDU) and Bavarian Christian Social Union (CSU) aims to use its presentation of the manifesto next Monday to widen its lead over the ecologist Greens ahead of a Sept. 26 federal election.
“We clearly reject tax increases,” read the CDU/CSU bloc’s draft manifesto, which top CDU officials discussed at the weekend.
Conservative Chancellor Angela Merkel, in power since 2005, is stepping down after September’s election, and senior CDU officials concede privately that it will be tough to retain their party’s appeal to voters after 16 years in charge.
The draft showed they also want to abolish a “solidarity tax” – introduced after reunification to support poorer states in eastern Germany – “as soon as possible”, and to reduce the number of people who have to pay the top tax rate of 42%.
The opposition Greens as well as the co-governing Social Democrats (SPD) want a moderate rise in the top tax rate, and to ease the burden on small- and medium-income households. Both parties also plan a reintroduction of the wealth tax.
Germany suspended its strict borrowing limits to finance its way through the COVID-19 crisis. SPD Finance Minister Olaf Scholz wants to reintroduce those limits from 2023, which the Greens oppose. The conservatives want to mobilise private financing to fund investment, while respecting the limits.
The CDU/CSU draft is not final and consultations on the manifesto are continuing, CDU sources said. If confirmed, the draft would align the conservative bloc with their preferred coalition partner, the business-friendly Free Democrats (FDP).
Polls show the right-leaning parties lack sufficient support now to form a coalition on their own. However, the CDU/CSU bloc has regained and begun extending its lead over the Greens.
An INSA poll on Saturday put support for the CDU/CSU at 27%, ahead of the Greens on 20%, with the left-leaning Social Democrats (SPD) on 16%, the FDP 13%, the far-right Alternative for Germany 11% and the far-left Linke on 6%.
(Reporting by Andreas Rinke and Markus Wacket; Writing by Paul Carrel; Editing by Michael Nienaber and Mark Heinrich)