German parliament votes no-confidence in Chancellor Scholz, paving way for election
Only 207 of the parliament's 733 expressed confidence, while 394 withheld it.
The German parliament accepted Chancellor Olaf Scholz's invitation to withdraw its confidence in him and his government on Monday, clearing the way for the Feb. 23 early election necessitated by the collapse of his government.
Scholz's three-party coalition fell apart last month after the pro-market Free Democrats quit in a row over debt, leaving his Social Democrats and the Greens without a parliamentary majority just when Germany faces a deepening economic crisis.
Preventing a shaky Germany
Under rules designed to prevent the instability that facilitated the rise of fascism in the 1930s, President Frank-Walter Steinmeier can only dissolve parliament and call elections if the chancellor calls, and loses, a confidence vote.
Only 207 of the parliament's 733 expressed confidence, while 394 withheld it.
"The motion has passed," said parliament president Baerbel Bas.
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