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The man, who is about to be the next German leader, can rely on the support of the final right alternative for Germany (AFD) for the second time in a week, a move that is widely condemned.
Friedrich Mertz, the leader of the Conservative CDU party, may need AFD votes to adopt legislation to strengthen immigration laws.
Former chancellor Angela Merkel accused him of turning his back on a previous bet not to work with AFD in the Bundestag.
Mertz defended his actions as “necessary” and said he did not seek or wanted AFD support.
“The right solution is not wrong, just because the wrong people agree to it,” he said.
As Friday’s proceedings are advanced, party leaders frantically tried to get MPs aside, with Merz confronted with a rebellion from the centerists in his party.
The CDU leader hopes that a more difficult position on migration will win AFD voters. But reading this party for this vote risks losing more measured voters.
Thousands of people took to the streets of Germany on Thursday night, as opposed to the CDU’s cooperation with the far right.
CDU is a leader in the ballot box before the German SNAP election next month. The AFD is currently ranked second, although Mertz has ruled out any type of coalition with them.
While the vote on Wednesday was observed on a continuous proposal because of changes to the immigration law passing through parliament, the actual legislation will be submitted on Friday, aimed at limiting immigration numbers and family collection rights.
However, his proposed measures are very unlikely to enter this country of the SNAP election in February and – if they do – they could face the EU law.
The proposed legislation is opposed to parties, including the Social Democrats of the current Chancellor Olaf Scholz (SPD). Scholz is among those who have criticized the reading of AFD mertz, calling it an “unforgivable mistake”.
“Since the founding of the Federal Republic of Germany, more than 75 years ago, there has always been a clear consensus among all the democrats in our parliaments: we do not make a common cause with the far right,” he said.
In her rare intervention in politics, Merkel said he was violating a bet Made in November to work with the Social Democratic Party and Greens to adopt legislation, not AFD. She described the promise as an “expression of great state political responsibility”.
In the meantime, Alice Wedel, the AFD leader, accused the mass parties of Wednesday in disrespect for German voters, refusing to work with her party.
AFD sections are classified as right -wing domestic intelligence extremists.
Voting on Wednesday saw, in the city of Ascafenburg.
It has become a central issue in the election campaign that was triggered by the collapse of the Scholz ruling coalition.