Pressure mounted today on Germany's Social Democrat leader Martin Schulz to reconsider an alliance with Chancellor Angela Merkel's conservatives and stop Europe's biggest economy from sinking into months of paralysis.
Schulz has repeatedly said the SPD would not return as the junior coalition partner in a government led by Merkel, after suffering a stinging defeat in September's general election.
But after Merkel's bid at forging a coalition with other parties fell apart, plunging Germany into a political crisis, voices within and outside the SPD have grown louder in questioning Schulz's decision and push for another election.
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Steinmeier will meet Schulz tomorrow.
The president has already held talks with the leaders of parties in the failed coalition talks -- the pro-business FDP -- which halted the negotiations, the ecologist Greens and Merkel's Bavarian allies the CSU.
As the crisis shows no signs of abating, the Sueddeutsche daily reported that "in the SPD, unease is growing over its clear refusal of a grand coalition".
"One must speak with the president openly, without already insisting on your own point of view," Johannes Kahrs, who leads the right-leaning wing of the SPD, told Bild daily.
EU Budget Commissioner Guenther Oettinger also urged the SPD to reexamine its stance.
"With a view on Germany's ability to take action in Europe, the SPD should once again consider if it should not join a government," Oettinger, a CSU politician, told Spiegel weekly.
Schulz himself told national news agency DPA today that he is "certain, that we will find a good solution for our country in the coming days and weeks".
He added that his party "is well aware of its responsibility in the current difficult situation."
Schulz's comments came as Bild reported that "resistance is growing" against him.
The "most prominent secret advocate for a new grand coalition is deputy chancellor Sigmar Gabriel", added Germany's top-selling daily.
Schulz has declared that he was ready for a snap poll, but latest surveys show that an early election would likely deliver similar results to September's -- and the risk of potentially getting a worse score than the record low 20.5 per cent is something that SPD members fear.
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