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THE HINDU Editorial Vocabulary - July 7, 2018 - Topic 1


Merkel’s deal
Angela Merkel, now in her fourth term as German Chancellor, has weathered many crises without jeopardising the stability of the government in Berlin, or the integrity of the eurozone. After an inconclusive election in September 2017, she held firm against the demands of smaller parties that seemed incompatible with her moderate and accommodative stance. In March, the initially reluctant centre-left Social Democratic Party (SPD) saw wisdom in reviving the grand coalition with Ms. Merkel’s conservative Christian Democratic Union as the only realistic option to avert another poll. 

This week she resolved a row on the refugee question that could have ended the CDU’s 70-year alliance with its sister party from Bavaria, the Christian Social Union, and risked her government’s fall. Horst Seehofer, the Interior Minister from the CSU, wanted migrants to be immediately turned back to the country of their original registration in the European Union. The Chancellor held that the proposal was at odds with the bloc’s principle of free movement as embodied in the Schengen passport-free zone and would undermine EU unity. Under the latest compromise, asylum seekers registered outside Germany would be accommodated in transit centres on the border with Austria and sent directly to the respective states. The step represents a victory for Mr. Seehofer, a staunch opponent of the open-doors approach on migration who had threatened to resign form his party and government positions. The compromise is a further dilution of Ms. Merkel’s bold 2015 move to allow about a million refugees into Germany, which was subsequently softened by setting annual limits to curb inflows. As a junior partner in the current coalition, the SPD had expressed scepticism over the latest proposal, insisting that it fell outside the scope of the original agreement with the CDU. While echoing the concern that the transit centres not be reduced to internment camps, Ms. Merkel has given an assurance that people could not be held for long periods under the country’s constitution.
Clearly, Germany’s major mainstream parties are faced with the dangers that liberal and centrist forces are up against across the EU and elsewhere. The number of refugee arrivals into Germany has fallen significantly since 2016. But the issue has acquired renewed urgency in view of elections scheduled for October in Bavaria. The CSU is anxious to arrest the erosion of its popular base in favour of the far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD) and has been lurching further to the right itself. The perilous consequences of that slant have been evident in several EU states, the hollowing out of the political middle-ground and strengthening of extreme forces. On the other hand, the reality of mass immigration today calls for a concerted approach on conflict resolution and respect for the rule of law.
Vocabulary

Jeopardising: put someone or something into a situation in which there is a danger of loss, harm, or failure.
Example: A devaluation of the dollar would jeopardize New York's position as a financial center
Synonyms: threaten, endanger, imperil, risk, put at risk, put in danger/jeopardy

Stability: the state of being stable.
Example: There are fears for the political stability of the area
Synonyms: firmness, solidity, steadiness, strength, security, safety; balance of mind

Incompatible: opposed in character as to be incapable of existing together.
Example: Cleverness and femininity were seen as incompatible
Synonyms: irreconcilable, conflicting, opposed, opposing, opposite, contradictory

Reluctant: unwilling and hesitant; disinclined.
Example: She seemed reluctant to discuss the matter
Synonyms: unwilling, disinclined, unenthusiastic, resistant, resisting, opposed

Alliance: a union or association formed for mutual benefit, especially between countries or organizations.
Example: A defensive alliance between Australia and New Zealand
Synonyms: association, union, league, confederation, federation, confederacy

Embodied: be an expression of or give a tangible or visible form to an idea, quality, or feeling
Example: A team that embodies competitive spirit and skill
Synonyms: personify, realize, manifest, symbolize, represent, express, concretize

Compromise: an agreement or a settlement of a dispute that is reached by each side making concessions.
Example: An ability to listen to two sides in a dispute, and devise a compromise acceptable to both
Synonyms: agreement, understanding, settlement, terms, deal, trade-off, bargain

Asylum: an institution offering shelter and support to people who are mentally ill.
Example: He'd been committed to an asylum
Synonyms: psychiatric hospital, mental hospital, mental institution, mental asylum

Scepticism: a skeptical attitude; doubt as to the truth of something.
Example: These claims were treated with skepticism
Synonyms: doubt, doubtfulness, a pinch of salt, disbelief, cynicism, distrust

Mainstream: belonging to or characteristic of the mainstream.
Example: Mainstream politics
Synonyms: normal, conventional, ordinary, orthodox, conformist, accepted

Assurance: a positive declaration intended to give confidence; a promise.
Example: He gave an assurance that work would not recommence until Wednesday
Synonyms: word of honor, word, promise, pledge, vow, avowal, oath, bond

Consequences: a result or effect of an action or condition.
Example: Many have been laid off from work as a consequence of the administration's policies
Synonyms: result, upshot, outcome, effect, repercussion, ramification, corollary

Perilous: full of danger or risk.
Example: A perilous journey south
Synonyms: dangerous, hazardous, risky, unsafe, treacherous

Conflict: a serious disagreement or argument, typically a protracted one.
Example: The eternal conflict between the sexes
Synonyms: dispute, quarrel, squabble, disagreement, dissension, clash



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