German parliament rejects opposition's draft migration law
The German parliament has rejected an opposition draft law aimed at tightening immigration policy, following controversy over the conservatives' cooperation with the far right. With elections approaching, opposition leader Friedrich Merz argued th...

Opposition leader Friedrich Merz, whose conservatives are leading in the polls before a Feb. 23 snap election, said the new law was a necessary response to a series of high-profile killings in public spaces by people of immigrant background.
His similar, non-binding motion was passed by parliament on Wednesday thanks to backing from legislators from the Alternative for Germany (AfD), prompting a wave of protest from the public, politicians and even some of his own party at a supposed breach of an agreement not to work with the far right.
A DeutschlandTrend poll for public television found that 67% of voters backed permanent border controls, including over half the supporters of Chancellor Olaf Scholz's Social Democrats.
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