- Chipmaker Intel beats revenue expectations amidst Q4 loss
- Key nominees for the Grammy Awards
- Beyonce leads Grammys pack at gala backdropped by fires
- Samsung Electronics posts 129.85% jump in Q4 operating profit
- 'Shouldn't have happened:' DC air collision stuns experts
- Donald Trump: air crash investigator-in-chief?
- Nicaragua legislature cements 'absolute power' of president, wife
- McIlroy launches PGA season debut with hole-in-one
- Figure skating in shock as athletes, coaches perish in US crash
- Kim opens up four-stroke lead in LPGA's season opener
- Man Utd progress to Europa last 16 'really important' for Amorim overhaul
- Postecoglou hails Europa League win 'made in Tottenham'
- 'Not interested': Analysts sceptical about US, Russia nuclear talks
- Trump to decide on oil tariffs on Canada, Mexico
- MAHA Moms: Why RFK Jr's health agenda resonates with Americans
- Neymar, eyeing 2026 World Cup, announces return to Brazil's Santos
- 'The region will die': Ukraine's Donbas mines within Russia's grasp
- 'Campaign of terror': Georgia's escalating rights crackdown
- French luxury billionaire sparks tax debate with threat to leave
- Apple profit climbs but sales miss expectations
- Man Utd, Spurs advance to last 16 in Europa League
- Trump blames deadly Washington air collision on 'diversity'
- Itoje says England 'ready' for Six Nations kings Ireland
- Rennes sack Sampaoli, announce Beye as new coach
- Trump insists Egypt, Jordan will take Gazans
- Stones lead tributes to 'beautiful' Marianne Faithfull, dead at 78
- Washington midair crash: What we know so far
- Syria's new leader pledges 'national dialogue conference'
- McIlroy sinks hole-in-one at PGA Pebble Beach Pro-Am
- American skier Shiffrin remembers air crash victims on return from injury
- Sixties icon Marianne Faithfull to be 'dearly missed' after death at 78
- Barca's Bonmati voices opposition to Saudi Arabia hosting Spanish Super Cup
- On first trip, Rubio to wield big stick in Latin America
- Neymar announces return to Brazil's Santos
- Russian drone attack kills nine in east Ukraine
- Marianne Faithfull: from muse to master
- Benin court jails two ex-allies of president for 20 years
- Elite figure skaters and coaches on crashed US flight
- New abnormal begins for east DR Congo's looted Goma after siege
- Easterby ready for long-term contest between Ireland fly-half duo
- Siao Him Fa leads on sombre day at figure skating Europeans
- Shiffrin fifth ahead of second run in bid for 100th World Cup win
- Trump blames 'diversity' for deadly Washington airliner collision
- 'No awkwardness' for Dupont's France with Jegou, Auradou selection
- Lula says if Trump hikes tariffs, Brazil will reciprocate
- Merkel slams successor over far-right support on immigration bill
- PSG sweat on Zaire-Emery fitness for Champions League play-off
- Stock markets firm on ECB rate cut, corporate results
- Russian drone barrage kills eight in east Ukraine
- Mexican economy shrinks for first time in three years
Germany: Migration reform package
The German CDU/CSU party has received a majority in the Bundestag for its demands for a drastic tightening of asylum policy. Parliament approved a five-point motion that, among other things, calls for permanent border controls, the rejection of those seeking protection and the detention of foreigners who have been ordered to leave the country.
The German FDP and AfD parties (Alternative for Germany) had signalled their support for the motion, meaning that the SPD and the Greens, including Chancellor Olaf Scholz (SPD) and Robert Habeck (Greens), failed miserably to prevent a change in asylum policy in Germany. The shameful fear of the SPD and the Greens of a complete loss of power in the outgoing Bundestag was almost tangible.
AfD Chancellor candidate Alice Weidel addressed the issue of migration in her speech and said that the current SPD and Green policies were deadly and affected the whole country. She accused the red-green coalition of organising demonstrations ‘at the expense of the victims’. Weidel also criticises the incomprehensible grin photo of the Greens at the demonstration in Berlin, on the occasion of a memorial service for the victims of the murders of Aschafenburg.
Before the vote, the ‘still’ Chancellor Olaf Scholz (66, SPD), who after almost four years has completely failed with his policies in the Federal Republic of Germany, made a government statement in which he could do nothing more than praise his government's work, as always. This was followed by a battle of words between the head of government and the opposition! In his speech, Merz emphasised that the SPD and the Greens are also ‘becoming smaller and smaller’. Friedrich Merz said: ‘Now they have to accept that the right decision will be made without them, but on the merits of the case. A right decision is not wrong if the wrong people agree to it’.