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European Union

Germany’s Gabriel Says EU Break-up No Longer Unthinkable

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Reuters
Reuters
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Reuters
Reuters
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January 7, 2017, 10:06 AM ET
Sigmar Gabriel Visits North Rhine-Westphalia
GERMANY - AUGUST 15: German Vice Chancellor and Economy and Energy Minister Sigmar Gabriel, who is also party chairman of the German Social Democrats (SPD), tours the J.D. Neuhaus produces pneumatically and hydraulically-operated hoists and crane systems on August 15, 2016 in Witten, Germany. Gabriel is visiting a variety of companies, projects and meeting with citizens in North Rhine-Westphalia as part of his annual summer tour. Germany faces federal elections in 2017. (Photo by Sascha Schuermann/Getty Images) Sascha Schuermann/Getty Images

Germany’s insistence on austerity in the euro zone has left Europe more divided than ever and a break-up of the European Union is no longer inconceivable, German Vice Chancellor Sigmar Gabriel told Der Spiegel magazine.

Gabriel, whose Social Democrats (SPD) are junior partner to Chancellor Angela Merkel’s conservatives in her ruling grand coalition, said strenuous efforts by countries like France and Italy to reduce their fiscal deficits came with political risks.

“I once asked the chancellor, what would be more costly for Germany: for France to be allowed to have half a percentage point more deficit, or for Marine Le Pen to become president?” he said, referring to the leader of the far-right National Front.

“Until today, she still owes me an answer,” added Gabriel, whose SPD favours a greater focus on investment while Merkel’s conservatives put more emphasis on fiscal discipline as a foundation for economic prosperity.

German Ifo Think Tank Chief Says Italy Risks Quitting Euro Zone

The SPD is expected to choose Gabriel, their long-standing chairman who is also economy minister, to run against Merkel for chancellor in September’s federal election, senior party sources said on Thursday.

Asked if he really believed he could win more votes by transferring more German money to other EU countries, Gabriel replied: “I know that this discussion is extremely unpopular.”

“But I also know about the state of the EU. It is no longer unthinkable that it breaks apart,” he said in the interview, published on Saturday.

“Should that happen, our children and grandchildren would curse us,” he added. “Because Germany is the biggest beneficiary of the European community – economically and politically.”

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