“I
believe de Maizière’s plan is necessary. We don’t have unlimited
capacity” — Wolfgang Schäuble
Angela
Merkel’s cabinet revolt
The
chancellor and her top aides split over her refugee policy.
By MATTHEW
KARNITSCHNIG 11/13/15, 5:30 AM CET Updated 11/14/15, 2:57 AM CET
BERLIN — Some of
the strongest opposition to Angela Merkel’s refugee policy has
started to emerge from an unexpected quarter: her own cabinet.
In recent days, two
longtime Merkel allies — Finance Minister Wolfgang Schäuble and
Interior Minister Thomas de Maizière — publicly questioned the
government’s strategy and called for tougher policies to slow the
refugee influx.
Schäuble, speaking
in Berlin late Wednesday, warned that Germany faced a potentially
destructive “avalanche” of refugees.
“Avalanches can be
triggered when a somewhat careless skier heads down the hill,
shifting just a little bit of snow,” Schäuble said, drawing what
many viewed as a not-so-subtle analogy to Merkel’s September
decision to welcome thousands of refugees stranded in Hungary.
The criticism has
laid bare a growing division between Merkel and conservatives in her
party who are demanding a tougher line. Though Merkel’s hold on the
chancellorship remains firm, the open challenges to her authority
from senior cabinet officials reflect the increasing difficulty she
faces in keeping not just the German people, but her own party behind
her in refugee crisis.
Germany registered
758,000 refugees through October and will cross the million threshold
by the end of the year if the current rate of new arrivals holds.
Local communities across the country complain that they don’t have
the resources to cope. Recent polls suggest that the public’s
confidence in the government’s strategy is diminishing.
Support on the slide
Merkel’s
conservative alliance has felt the brunt of that frustration at the
polls. In September, the conservatives seemed invincible, with 42
percent of respondents in the country’s benchmark political poll
saying they would vote for the alliance. That support has since
dropped to 37 percent.
The right-wing
Alternative für Deutschland, which advocates stricter border
controls and limits on refugees, has seen its support double to 8
percent.
Schäuble’s move
to distance himself from Merkel is particularly significant. A former
interior minister and his party’s longest serving member of
parliament, Schäuble counts as the conservatives’ éminence Grise.
He remained loyal to
Merkel throughout the Greek crisis, even when the two disagreed on
policy. Associates say Schäuble’s dissent on the refugee question
is not political calculation but rather reflects his conviction that
Merkel’s open-door policy was a mistake.
Hints of the policy
disagreements within Merkel’s cabinet emerged last month when she
appointed her chief of staff, Peter Altmaier, to coordinate the
government’s response to the crisis. The move was viewed by many in
Berlin as an attempt to sideline de Maizière, whose ministry is
responsible for handling asylum seekers.
“I
believe de Maizière’s plan is necessary. We don’t have unlimited
capacity” — Wolfgang Schäuble
De Maizière, the
chancellor’s former chief of staff and longtime confidante, hasn’t
yielded. Late last week he announced that his ministry would
guarantee Syrians asylum for only one year and only allow refugees to
bring their families to Germany after two years of residence.
Currently Syrians
are granted asylum for three years and can request that their
families be allowed to join them.
The issue of
including refugees’ families is a sensitive one. Allowing family
members to come means that Germany could have to take in millions
more people. But refusing them will spur whole families to flee,
putting the lives of many women and children at risk, refugee groups
warn.
The plan, which the
minister announced on German radio Friday, created an uproar, in part
because he hadn’t consulted Merkel.
For Merkel, the
timing couldn’t have been worse. The day before, she had managed to
assuage the Bavarian wing of her party by agreeing to a package of
measures aimed at making it easier to deport rejected asylum seekers.
To secure the compromise, she also had to convince the center-left
Social Democrats, who govern in coalition with her conservatives. The
Social Democrats were also caught off guard by de Maizière’s plan
and accused Merkel’s allies of trying to trick them.
Within hours, de
Maizière was forced to backtrack.
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