Germany's Merz says state election will not impact his coalition

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BERLIN, March 9 (Reuters) - German Chancellor Friedrich Merz said Sunday’s election in the southern state of Baden-Wuerttemberg was a “bitter” result for his conservatives but ​would not affect the government in Berlin as he again ruled ‌out cooperating with the far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD).

The preliminary official result of the vote saw the environmental Greens marginally ahead of Merz’s Christian Democrats (CDU), leaving the two parties poised ​to continue the coalition that has run Baden-Wuerttemberg for the past ​decade.

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The Chancellor repeated his rejection of cooperating with the AfD, ⁠which finished in third place, confirming its position as Germany’s largest opposition ​party, even outside its heartland in the eastern states.

Merz said the result was ​largely due to the popularity of the Greens’ lead candidate, Cem Ozdemir, a moderate former agriculture minister with a more established profile than his 37-year-old CDU rival Manuel Hagel.

He said ​he had spoken with the leaders of his Social Democrat (SPD) coalition partners ​in Berlin and promised to move ahead more quickly with reforms to the sluggish economy, which ‌is ⁠emerging from two years in recession.

“We agree that this result will have no impact on the coalition here in Berlin. We will continue our work,” he told a news conference at the CDU party headquarters in Berlin.

“We need ​to make up ​for the ground ⁠we have lost in Germany over many years and decades, and we in the coalition are aware of this, ​as is the SPD,” he said, pledging to make “more substantial ​progress” ⁠with promised economic reforms.

Initially trailing in the race, the Greens caught up with Merz’s Christian Democrats as the ballot approached, helped by the popularity of Ozdemir. But ⁠the ​final result of the election, run on a ​mixture of direct and proportional representation, left the two parties with the same number of seats ​in state parliament.

Reporting by James Mackenzie, Editing by Linda Pasquini and Ros Russell

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