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News > World

Ally Fires Migrant Ultimatum at Merkel as Trump Wades in

  • German Chancellor Merkel and Italian PM Conte hold a news conference at the chancellery in Berlin

    German Chancellor Merkel and Italian PM Conte hold a news conference at the chancellery in Berlin | Photo: Reuters

Published 18 June 2018
Opinion

Trump's tweets attacking Merkel's policy highlighted the emblematic role Germany has come to play in global debates on migration.

German Chancellor Angela Merkel's conservative Bavarian allies are giving her two weeks on Monday to find a European solution to a row over immigration that threatens to scupper her three-month-old coalition government.

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Bavaria's Christian Social Union (CSU), anxious about losing votes to a new right-wing party in an October regional election, wants a ban on admitting migrants into Germany who have already registered in another EU country. 

The CSU leadership agreed at a meeting in Munich to delay introducing their entry ban until after a June 28-29 European Union summit, allowing Merkel time to seek an EU-wide solution.

Merkel opposes any unilateral move by Interior Minister Horst Seehofer, who is also CSU chairman, that would reverse her 2015 welcoming policy on migrants and undermine her authority. Monday's compromise means he can introduce immediate expulsion for one subset of migrants.

"We wish the chancellor much luck," Seehofer told a news conference in Munich, announcing that he would nonetheless issue orders for people who have already been expelled to be turned back at the borders. "This is not about winning time or anything like that but rather that in July, if there is no result at European level, we must implement this - that is a question for the functioning of our constitutional state."

U.S. President Donald Trump, defending his own tough anti-immigrant polices, waded into Germany's debate on Monday with a series of tweets criticizing Merkel's open-border policy as a "big mistake" that had fueled crime in Europe.

"The people of Germany are turning against their leadership as migration is rocking the already tenuous Berlin coalition," he wrote. "Crime in Germany is way up. Big mistake made all over Europe in allowing millions of people in who have so strongly and violently changed their culture!"

Overall, crime in Germany is at record lows, while polls show Merkel and her coalition enjoy broad support among voters. Federal Interior Ministry data shows the number of new arrivals in Germany seeking asylum fell 33 percent on the year to 186,000 in 2017, down from 280,000 the previous year and 890,000 in 2015, at the peak of the migrant crisis.

Merkel, the EU's longest-serving leader, welcomed Monday's compromise in a dispute that has threatened to unravel her new coalition, and said her Christian Democrat (CDU) party would decide how to proceed after the two-week deadline elapsed.

"The CDU and the CSU have the common goal of better organizing and steering immigration into our country and significantly reducing the number of people entering this country," she said. "A situation like 2015 cannot and will not be repeated."

But she reiterated her opposition to Germany unilaterally closing its borders as this would pass the migrant burden on to neighboring countries, "unleashing undesired domino effects."

A split with the CSU, their ally of seven decades, would deprive the CDU of the governing majority it commands in the Bundestag lower house in coalition with the Social Democrats (SPD). It would also gravely weaken the CSU, whose dominance of Bavarian politics relies on its influence in Berlin.

Perhaps reflecting that nervousness, Seehofer later added: "Nobody wants the end of the coalition, a collapse of the alliance or the fall of the government."

Merkel would still have options if the CSU quit the coalition: Greens leader Annalena Baerbock refused on Monday to rule out replacing the CSU in Merkel's coalition. "If we're in a talks situation in a few weeks, we'll talk," she said.

Merkel later on Monday met Italian Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte for talks in Berlin and said Berlin wanted to support Rome in its efforts to reduce the number of migrants arriving on its shores, possibly handling asylum requests for the European Union in non-European countries including Libya.

Matteo Salvini, interior minister in Conte's far-right government that took office this month in Rome, has adopted a policy of blocking foreign humanitarian boats from Italian ports.

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