
German Social Democrats Want Half a Million Migrants per Year
The SPD’s radical migration agenda puts pressure on the CDU to compromise, despite growing public concern over crime and integration failures.

The SPD’s radical migration agenda puts pressure on the CDU to compromise, despite growing public concern over crime and integration failures.

His wavering stance on migration and fiscal policy has weakened support even among his party’s own voters

CDU’s Friedrich Merz was closing the borders before he was not, and now his preliminary coalition agreement with the social democrats seems to be mostly hot air.

The right-wing party is taking legal action to stop the outgoing Bundestag from approving a massive new debt plan before the newly elected parliament convenes.

As Europe pins its hopes on Merz for stability, his shaky domestic alliances could turn his chancellorship into a political minefield.

The CDU leader faces a backlash from his own party after breaking key promises on debt and migration in exchange for power.

“Absurd:” CDU and SPD aim to have debt-funded military and infrastructure spending approved before the new Bundestag forms.

Germany’s prospective next chancellor is using undemocratic methods to forge an alliance with the Left, itself already rejected by the electorate.

Of the 155 migrants flown in last week, only 3% were former support staff to German troops in Afghanistan.

The CDU’s and SPD’s profound fear of change has granted the AfD its greatest momentum, emerging as Germany’s new “workers’ party.”