German Migration Talks Collapse Amid CDU’s Call for Stronger Border Control
The government and centre-right CDU are trying to outbid each other in toughness, as the anti-immigration AfD looks likely to win another regional election.
The government and centre-right CDU are trying to outbid each other in toughness, as the anti-immigration AfD looks likely to win another regional election.
Voters view migration as the number one concern, but for establishment parties, the priority is preventing the AfD from becoming the strongest force in the state.
Why does the pretence that ‘transwomen are women’ continue?
The frequency and severity of this now-common crime make clear that ‘isolated incidents’ add up to a chilling reality.
Opposition centre-right CDU wants to reject some migrants at the border, but the governing Greens oppose the suggestion.
The big question following AfD’s successful results is: who will govern Saxony and Thuringia?
Berlin proposes knife bans and faster deportations—promises the voters have heard before.
After the Solingen attack, organisers of the Grindelfest said they could not guarantee the safety of participants.
“As a top religious representative of the inhumane regime in Tehran, his time in Germany has come to an end,” says Hamburg’s interior minister.
Authorities not only failed to deport the Syrian asylum seeker, they continued to pay him monthly benefits
The frequency and severity of this now-common crime make clear that ‘isolated incidents’ add up to a chilling reality.
Opposition centre-right CDU wants to reject some migrants at the border, but the governing Greens oppose the suggestion.
The big question following AfD’s successful results is: who will govern Saxony and Thuringia?
Berlin proposes knife bans and faster deportations—promises the voters have heard before.
After the Solingen attack, organisers of the Grindelfest said they could not guarantee the safety of participants.
“As a top religious representative of the inhumane regime in Tehran, his time in Germany has come to an end,” says Hamburg’s interior minister.
Authorities not only failed to deport the Syrian asylum seeker, they continued to pay him monthly benefits
If adopted, the measure would let the Netherlands follow in the footsteps of others, including Sweden, Denmark, and Germany.
AfD and Bündnis Sahra Wagenknecht have both expressed their outrage at government inaction.
“Some things will have to be changed in EU law,” the German chancellor claimed.
The Syrian knifeman, who murdered three people and wounded eight more, should have been deported last year.
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