German Chancellor, Angela Merkel warned incoming United States president, Donald Trump to guard against his protectionist tendencies, citing lessons learned in the 2008 global financial crash and stressing the need to âmove forward togetherâ.
Donald Trump / Angela Merkel
âMy profound conviction is that there are more advantages⊠to moving forward together than when everyone resolves their problems for themselves. I am truly convinced of this,â she told a press conference at a meeting of her CDU party.
Asked if she believed âprotectionist tendenciesâ by Trump could pose a threat, Merkel recalled the example of the 2008 global financial crisis, which âcame from the United Statesâ.
âAs heads of state and government (of the G20), we said: âWe must resolve the problem facing us together,ââ she said.
âAnd the response to overcome that financial crisis was not a response based on closing oneself off, but a response which called for cooperation, for common rules, for regulation of financial markets.
âI think this way worked, and naturally we are going to seek dialogue with the new American president,â who will be inaugurated on January 20.
On the campaign trail Trump notably threatened to take protectionist measures against Chinese and Mexican imports, and claimed a first success with a decision by US motor giant Ford not to build a new plant in Mexico.
Trumpâs attitude has fuelled concern in Germany: on Thursday Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier said he was âperplexedâ by Trump comparing the leak of a dossier of unsubstantiated allegations against him to something that could have happened in Nazi Germany.
During the US campaign, Steinmeier was even more damning, saying the prospect of a Trump presidency was âfrighteningâ for the world.
He compared Trump to a âhate preacherâ, saying he had much in common with âfearmongersâ in Germanyâs right-wing populist AfD party and advocates of Britainâs exit from the EU.