Germany's coalition talks between CDU and SPD seemingly have them agree to take on massive debt for the sake of spending on defense and infrastructure over the coming decade. They want to try to put this into the constitution (for the sake of safer long term planning) with the current parliament where CDU, SPD and Greens combined still hold the necessary two third majority for the remainder of this month, so there's not much time left for the easy path. Obviously, the Greens will demand concessions in regards to their bread and butter which is combating climate change, so this will be challenging despite being a reasonable request.
If the three involved parties can't get this done by the end of March, the newly elected parliament will have to get The Left on board as well for changes to the constitution, because the only other party left (AfD) will be against it by default. The Left's demands would concern redistribution of wealth in favor of the majority of Germans, which is again reasonable, but not what conservatives have in mind.
So the way this will play out is probably that conservatives will insist on getting their way while everyone else has to make concessions for the sake of Europe's security or else they'll be the bad guys. A repeat of the shitshow in January when conservatives voted for a resolution with the help of the AfD and then blamed SPD and Greens for supposedly forcing conservatives to pursue that path as if the CDU hadn't had a chance to refrain from doing so.
Legend11 correctly predicted that GTA IV will outsell Super Smash Bros. Brawl. I was wrong.







