Henry Srebrnik, [Halifax] Chronicle Herald
German Chancellor Angela Merkel is running scared.
Clearly, the right-wing Alternative for Germany (AfD) is nipping at her
heels. She is now shifting to the right in an attempt to win next
September’s German federal election.
The AfD is the first populist party likely to clear the five-per-cent
threshold required to land seats in the Bundestag. In recent state
elections, it has siphoned votes from Merkel’s Christian Democratic
Union (CDU) after capitalising on anger in parts of the German
electorate over her liberal refugee policy.
It now has seats in 10 of Germany’s 16 states.
Though Merkel’s party remains the frontrunner, the AfD is currently polling at about 12 per cent nationally.
At the recent CDU party conference in Essen, Merkel, who has led
Germany for 11 years, confirmed she would run for a fourth term. But she
acknowledged the election would be more difficult than any other she
has contested.
Merkel’s decision, in the summer of 2015, following the escalation in
the Syrian civil war, to suspend all external border controls and the
usual rules on refugees, resulted in a record influx of nearly 1.1
million refugees and migrants, mostly from predominantly Muslim
countries.
Merkel’s opponents have blamed the policy for the mass sexual assaults
last New Year’s Eve in Cologne and two recent terror attacks by ISIS
supporters. So her government is now addressing public fears surrounding
the issue.
In an about-face, Merkel has now called for a public ban on the Muslim
full-face veil in some areas of public life — such as courts, schools
and universities, as well as in road traffic and during police checks.
A full ban is considered incompatible with Germany’s basic laws.
To the applause of about 1,000 delegates, she called the burqa and niqab not compatible with German culture.
“Here we say ‘show your face,’ ” she said. “So full veiling is not
appropriate here. It should be prohibited wherever legally possible.”
A year ago, the CDU had rejected such a ban.
She also promised that honour codes or Islamic Shariah law would never
replace German justice. “That has to be expressed very clearly.”
Merkel told the party conference that last year’s large influx of
refugees would not happen again. A situation like that of 2015 “should
not be repeated.”
She stated that refugees had found protection in Germany against war
and persecution in their troubled homelands. But, she added, “not every
refugee can stay.”
She also stressed it was legitimate for Germany to expect newcomers to integrate.
Her government has moved to toughen asylum rules and to declare several
countries “safe” — meaning people from there cannot expect to receive
protection in Germany.
Thomas de Maiziere, the German interior minister and one of Merkel’s
closest allies in the CDU, had already proposed a partial burqa ban last
August. He called the veils “contrary to integration.”
He said the law would apply in “places where it is necessary for our society’s coexistence.”
All this is taking place within the context of rising populist and
anti-immigrant sentiment throughout much of the continent. Politicians
who play on nationalism and worries about economic disenfranchisement
are on the rise.
Is the current flow of Europe’s politics now also working against Merkel?
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