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    1. Home
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    Headlines

    Germany's Spd Leaders Say Focus on Reforms Not Personnel Changes After Election Loss

    Published by Global Banking & Finance Review®

    Posted on March 23, 2026

    3 min read

    Last updated: March 23, 2026

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    Germany's SPD leaders say focus on reforms not personnel changes after election loss - Headlines news and analysis from Global Banking & Finance Review
    Tags:PoliticsElectionsGermanySocial DemocratsReforms

    Quick Summary

    Following a "catastrophic" state election loss in Rhineland‑Palatinate, SPD co‑leaders Lars Klingbeil and Baerbel Bas insist the party must prioritize reform delivery over internal personnel debate.

    Table of Contents

    • Chancellor Merz's Reform Agenda and Coalition Challenges
    • State Election Results and Political Impact
    • SPD's Response to Election Defeat
    • Merz's Commitment to Reform
    • PRESERVING INDUSTRY
    • SPD's Internal Debate and Reform Strategy
    • Next Steps for SPD and Coalition

    Germany's Merz wants to push ahead reforms after state election shakes coalition

    Chancellor Merz's Reform Agenda and Coalition Challenges

    By James Mackenzie

    BERLIN, March 23 (Reuters) - German Chancellor Friedrich Merz promised on Monday to move quickly with promised reforms to tax and social security after his conservative Christian Democrats beat his Social Democrat coalition partners in a weekend state election.

    State Election Results and Political Impact

    The vote in the western state of Rhineland-Palatinate saw Merz's CDU party replace the SPD that had held power in the state for 35 years, giving the chancellor a personal boost but plunging his coalition partners into crisis.

    It was the second of five state elections Merz's struggling coalition must navigate this year and there was heavy pressure on the SPD leadership following a steady slide in approval ratings that has left the party in third place behind the far-right Alternative for Germany.

    SPD's Response to Election Defeat

    Merz said he recognised the difficulties the defeat created for the SPD but said it was important for the government to show that it was determined to carry on with reforms to restore Germany's flagging economy, which has only just emerged from two years of recession.

    Merz has promised a major package of reforms covering tax, health and social welfare in coming months but has faced heavy criticism for the time it has taken his coalition to convert promises into legislation.

    Merz's Commitment to Reform

    "I want to say to the people of Germany that we are now taking this election result as an incentive," he told a news conference in Berlin. "I want us to move forward with the coalition, with the SPD."

    PRESERVING INDUSTRY

    He said German labour costs were too high and bureaucracy was too burdensome for individuals and businesses and the government needed to pursue policies "for employees, but also for small and medium-sized enterprises, to preserve the industrial heart of our economy."

    SPD's Internal Debate and Reform Strategy

    SPD leaders Lars Klingbeil, finance minister in Merz's coalition and Baerbel Bas, the labour minister, said there needed to be a "hard debate" in the wider party leadership about responsibility for the loss in Rhineland-Palatinate.

    But they said the situation facing Germany was too serious for "self-lacerating" internal debates about personnel issues while a major package of reforms had to be agreed.

    Next Steps for SPD and Coalition

    Klingbeil, who called the result in Rhineland-Palatinate "catastrophic", said the unanimous view of the party's executive committee was that the best response was not "replacing individuals, but rather by setting a clear programmatic and strategic course."

    He said the party leadership as well as SPD ministers, state premiers and other senior party figures will meet on Friday to discuss a package of reforms which would then be discussed with their coalition partners.

    (Reporting by James Mackenzie; Editing by Andrew Cawthorne)

    Key Takeaways

    • •SPD suffered its worst result in Rhineland‑Palatinate since 1991, as the CDU overtook the party after 35 years of SPD rule, falling to 25.9% from 35.7% in 2021 (en.wikipedia.org)
    • •The result follows a disastrous 5.5% showing in the Baden‑Württemberg state election on 8 March 2026, SPD’s worst ever in that state (en.wikipedia.org)
    • •SPD leaders say the party will engage in a tough, programmatic internal debate, but avoid personnel changes to stay focused on delivering tax and social welfare reforms needed amid broader coalition instability (businessmirror.com.ph)

    References

    • 2026 Rhineland-Palatinate state election
    • 2026 Baden-Württemberg state election
    • Merz fails election test as Greens win German state vote | Michael Nienaber | Bloomberg

    Frequently Asked Questions about Germany's SPD leaders say focus on reforms not personnel changes after election loss

    1How did SPD leaders react to calls for internal personnel changes?

    SPD leaders dismissed the idea of replacing individuals, emphasizing the need to set a clear strategic course and engage in reform discussions.

    2What are the next steps for SPD leadership?

    SPD leadership will meet to agree on a package of reforms to discuss with their coalition partners, prioritizing policy changes over leadership debates.

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