thank you. i wonder you were saying no one was denied health insurance. the gentleman needs to use a microphone. are those the details. madame chancellor, president trump has a different style than some past presidents. i m wondering what you think of that style f you think it s good for the world. thank you both. thank you, mark. we just have a really wonderful group of people meeting later. we met with 12 pretty much knows in congress. you saw that a little while ago. they went from all nos to all yeses. we have a lot of yeses coming in. it s all coming together. we re going to have great health
benefitted. i think that s only fair. that s the power of concluding agreements that both sides win and that is the sort of spirit, i think, in which we ought to be guided in negotiating any agreement between the united states of america and the eu. i hope that we can resume the agreement that we started. we have just now concluded agreement with canada. and i hope that we will come back to the table and talk about the agreement between eu and the u.s. again. thank you. madame chancellor, a question addressed to you. today talking about a trade, the president in the past always said that he doesn t like multilateral trade agreements but prefers bilateral trade agreements. do you think from the eu s perspective, a bilateral agreement with washington on one side, the eu on the other side?
tried to show what is our vantage point, what is the american vantage point and then tried to find a compromise which is good for both sides because we need to be fair with each other. each and every one is xming from their leader that something good comes out of it for their own people. for germany i can say, people are different. people have different abilities, different traits of character, different other begins, have found their way into politics along different pathways. that s diversity, which is good. sometimes it s difficult to find compromises, but that s what we ve been elected for. if everything went like that without problem, we wouldn t need politicians to do these jobs. . translator: madame chancellor, given the experience of the gdr, you are always saying you are confident walls can fall also. how dangerous do you think the
purpose of concluding agreements that both sides win. that is the sort of spirit in which we ought to be guided in negotiating any agreements between the united states of america and the e.u. i hope that we can resume the agreement that we started. we have just now concluded an agreement with canada, and hope that we will come back to the table and talk about the agreement between the e.u. and the u.n. again. reporter: madame chancellor, a question addressed to you. today, we are talking about a trade. the president of the past always said that he does not like multilateral trade agreements but prefers bilateral trade agreements. do you think from the e.u. point of view that this is a bilateral agreement with the e.u. and
madame chancellor will plan b remain in force in the sense of recommending greece a time-out should this program not fly? and as regards the the fact that your parliamentary group seems to be very irritated, will you ask for a vote of confidence? no i will not ask for a vote of confidence. plan a has been realized so we don t need a plan b. but let me comment on the so-called plan b. i think what was sometimes overlooked is that such a plan could only enter into force if greece had asked for it. so it would have been a cooperative approach and not something that we can impose on the greek government because we always need agreement by the 19. so the evaluation runs as follows, this too, is something