Home WebMail Saturday, November 2, 2024, 05:35 AM | Calgary | -2.8°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Posted: 2015-10-14T14:28:03Z | Updated: 2015-10-19T16:44:35Z Merkel's Popularity Dips As Refugee Crisis Worsens | HuffPost

Merkel's Popularity Dips As Refugee Crisis Worsens

Merkel's Popularity Dips As Refugee Crisis Worsens
|
Open Image Modal
Germany's government hasn't been able to agree on an answer to the influx of refugees.
JOHN MACDOUGALL via Getty Images

 A fall in support and a government row over the refugee crisis raised the heat on German Chancellor Angela Merkel on Wednesday, forcing allies to defend the integrity of her coalition.

Germany, a favored destination for migrants, expects 800,000 to a million new arrivals this year. Many Germans feel the country cannot cope with the record influx.

As tempers frayed, Merkel's conservatives met fierce resistance from their Social Democrat (SPD) coalition partners over plans for transit zones at border crossings to process refugees' asylum requests. They have had to deny such centers would resemble concentration camps.

Asked whether the transit zone row heralded the end of the ruling coalition, Bavarian Interior Minister Joachim Herrmann told Deutschlandfunk radio: "No! We shouldn't talk about the failure of the coalition every time (there is an argument)."

A Forsa poll showed support for Merkel's conservatives had dropped one percent to 38 percent, its lowest level since June 2014.

Merkel is trying to steer a course between pressure from her conservatives - especially the Bavarian Christian Social Union (CSU), sister party of her Christian Democrats (CDU) - to take a harder line on refugees and SPD opposition to the transit zones.

Bavaria is the first point of entry for many migrants and the state has threatened to take the government to court unless it tries to limit the flow of asylum-seekers.

The CDU-run Interior Ministry has drawn up a draft bill that provides for the transit zones, which would hold refugees at border crossings so asylum requests can be examined before they are allowed in.

SPD leader Sigmar Gabriel has dubbed the centers "detention zones". Responding to such criticism, CSU lawmaker Stephan Mayer told Deutschlandfunk on Tuesday: "This is not about concentration camps."

WE CAN, CAN'T WE?

Merkel also faces increased pressure from her own conservatives to end the open-door policy she has pursued with the catchphrase: "We can do this!"

A YouGov poll on Tuesday showed that 56 percent of people surveyed thought there were already too many refugees in Germany and that the country could not cope with more.

Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble on Tuesday questioned whether all refugees should receive the same benefits as others in Germany.

"If we pay out from the first day as much Hartz IV (benefits) to such people - who we first need to teach to speak and write the (German) language - as to someone who has worked for 30 years and is now unemployed, what will a trade unionist say to his members?" he asked.

At a meeting of the conservatives' parliamentary group on Tuesday, Merkel resisted pressure to tighten border controls and turn away refugees arriving via Austria.

"Her dominance over the party has suffered a bit," said Gero Neugebauer, political scientist at Berlin's Free University.

But he added that she could afford to stand firm.

"There is no one else who is ready to be chancellor," he said. "That is Merkel's strength."

 

 

 Also on HuffPost:

 

 

Your Support Has Never Been More Critical

Other news outlets have retreated behind paywalls. At HuffPost, we believe journalism should be free for everyone.

Would you help us provide essential information to our readers during this critical time? We can't do it without you.

Support HuffPost