Merkel challenger wants ‘fairness’ pact in German election
BERLIN — The man nominated to lead Germany’s centre-left Social Democrats into the country’s upcoming election said Sunday that he would ask all parties to agree on a fairness pact, to prevent vitriol of the kind seen during last year’s U.S. election campaign.
Martin Schulz, a small-town mayor from western Germany who rose to become president of the European Parliament, said he wouldn’t shy away from debates with his political opponents, but that fake news about candidates and the use of so-called bots to spread messages on social media need to be stopped.
“What we saw last year during the election campaign in the United States, the lack of decency in debates, that shocked me deeply,” he told an audience in Berlin. “It opened up rifts and destroyed much in a country which once stood for freedom and tolerance. That mustn’t happen to us in Germany.”
Members of the Social Democratic Party’s national executive agreed unanimously Sunday to make Schulz their candidate for the chancellorship, a post that traditionally goes to the party which receives the greatest share of votes in a general election.