Germany’s Likely Leader Flirts With a Taboo: Working With the Far Right

Germany’s Political Turmoil 

The political disorders of Germany

The political agitation of Germany

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Responding to the homicide of a child, the Christian Democrats at the ballot head are pushing for a revision of the migration legislation – with votes from the choice for Germany.

By Jim Tankersley and Christopher F. Schuetze

Reports from Berlin

The guy who is favored as Gerguyy’s next chancellor has opened the door to run with the option to make Gerguy pass new immigration restrictions, potentially breaking a long -standing effort for a vacation whose flirting with the Nazi language has converted it In a satema to the current policy.

The inauguration of Friedrich Merz, the leader of the right-wing Central Christian Democrats, who is leading the polls for next month’s chancellor election, came here after a stabbing last week in Bavaria by a mentally Afghan immigrant who gave two people, adding a young child.

The attack, the latest in a string of high-profile killings carried out by immigrants, has since upended Germany’s parliamentary election, set for Feb. 23, refocusing what had been an economy-themed campaign toward the contentious issue of migration.

Merz is looking to exhibit electorate so that he and his party take the adjustment of the borders of Germany and the additional deportations of migrants that the government has decided that they deserve to leave the country.

But until now, all parties at the national point had built what is colloquially known as a “firewall” around the AFD, hoping to extinguish the party’s passage into the mainstream.

AFD lately is a time in the surveys before the elections, comfortably sitting in front of the social democrats of Foreign Minister Olaf Scholz, although the Christian Democrats of Mr. Merz.

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