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To: Joseph G. who wrote (7068)9/27/1998 3:11:00 PM
From: Joseph G.  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 86076
 
<<Schroeder ousts Kohl in German
elections

September 27, 1998
Web posted at: 2:03 p.m. EST (1903 GMT)

BONN, Germany (CNN) -- For the first
time in modern German history, a
sitting chancellor was voted out of office
Sunday when Gerhard Schroeder and
his Social Democratic Party (SPD)
soundly defeated veteran Christian
Democrat leader Helmut Kohl.

Latest Projected Results

The landmark vote brings to an end 16
years of Kohl's conservative-oriented government. A Christian Democratic Union
(CDU) spokesman conceded defeat almost immediately following the first TV
projections.

"The results of this election are a bitter defeat for us. But as good democrats,
we will respect the people's decision," said CDU party secretary Peter Hintze.

Projection: Bundestag Seats by Party

He thanked Kohl for all he had accomplished in his four terms in office,
specifically the unification of communist East Germany with the West in 1990.

Even though the SPD's victory was
clear immediately after polls closed, it
was unclear whether Schroeder's party
would be strong enough to form a
coalition with the Greens, or whether
the SPD would have to lead the
Christian Democrats in a so-called
grand coalition.

Schroeder would be the chancellor in
either scenario, analysts said.

Schroeder's victory signals not only the
changing of the guard in Germany, but also the changing of a generation.
Although only 14 years younger than Kohl, Schroeder will become the first
postwar German chancellor with no memory of World War II.

Witty, brisk and telegenic, Schroeder had
mounted a media-savvy campaign that
capitalized on snappy sound bites and his
appealing looks, offering voters a refreshing
departure from the plodding and long-winded
Kohl.

Schroeder also steered the left-leaning SPD into a more business-friendly
stance, something he called "the New Center," that came complete with a
slogan heralding "the power of the new."

Once viewed as a maverick and not widely liked in the party, Schroeder
nevertheless promised that there was no risk in making him the party's
candidate, and that there would be no surprises.

"I've learned to work in a disciplined
manner and to tell the difference
between what's desirable and what's
feasible," he said last spring.

'Careful and clever'

Among his campaign promises was the
assurance that there would be no new
taxes. Schroeder opposed Kohl's
proposed reforms to the German tax
system -- which is badly skewed and in
dire need of repair -- but is generally
reckoned to have done so for political reasons rather than because he opposed
reform itself.

Schroeder also reassured voters that he would continue Germany's current
foreign policy, although his personal style and perhaps even his priorities will
almost certainly be different.

Schroeder initially questioned the installation of the euro as the currency of
Europe, but more recently has said he would support its adoption.

Toward the end of the campaign, when Kohl was emphasizing his own foreign
policy expertise, Schroeder tried to reassure voters by saying he would adopt
the 19th century strategy of legendary German chancellor Otto von Bismarck
by being "careful and clever."

Schroeder was one of five children born into a
blue-collar family in the Lower Saxony town of
Mossenberg. He was raised by his mother, who
cleaned houses to support her family after her
husband was killed in World War II in 1944, the
year Schroeder was born.

Once a Marxist

He earned a law degree and at one time was a
Marxist, but he drifted into the SPD and became
active in its youth wing during the 1970s.

He wears dark suits and has a taste for Cuban
cigars and, having been married four times, pretty
women. Schroeder, who has no children, recently
married journalist Doris Koepf, who is 19 years
his junior.

Schroeder is known for his wit, which was on
display during a trip to Israel last spring that was
calculated to show off his foreign policy abilities.

During a speech, Schroeder alluded to an incident that had taken place the
week before when Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu angrily canceled
a dinner with British Foreign Secretary Robin Cook after Cook criticized the
Israelis' policy on Jewish settlements.

Schroeder said he was grateful to be in Israel "and especially that I got dinner
last night." >>