Home Europe Outgoing German Minister Claims Success In Curbing Irregular Immigration

Outgoing German Minister Claims Success In Curbing Irregular Immigration

While the number of asylum claims halved over the past two years, the number of people illegally present in Germany who were then repatriated had risen 55%.
German Interior Minister Nancy Faeser speaks during a session of the lower house of parliament Bundestag, after Christian Democratic Party (CDU) party leader Friedrich Merz succeeded on Wednesday in getting a motion passed in parliament that calls for a migration crackdown, including the rejection of asylum seekers at the country's land borders, in Berlin, Germany, January 31, 2025. REUTERS/Nadja Wohlleben/File Photo

Outgoing German interior minister hailed her government’s success in reducing irregular immigration, citing increased deportations and fewer asylum claims, in what appeared to be a center-left bid to join the next ruling coalition.

Nancy Faeser, a Social Democrat, remains as acting German minister until her party and the election-winning conservatives agree on a new coalition deal, with how to handle immigration the sharpest dividing line between the would-be partners.

Conservative leader Friedrich Merz, seeking to win back voters his Christian Democrats (CDU) lost to the far right, pledged during the campaign to turn away at the borders people with the wrong documents. The SPD opposes this hard-line approach, saying it violates European Union law.

“Migration policy isn’t something for jokers, but a management assignment you have to work on seriously,” Faeser said in a statement on Tuesday, asserting that Chancellor Olaf Scholz’s government had successfully curbed irregular migration.

While the number of asylum claims halved over the past two years, she said, the number of people illegally present in Germany who were then repatriated had risen 55% and the number of skilled workers who had immigrated legally had risen by 77%.

“The numbers speak for themselves,” she said. “Today we are a country that invests more in integration and is more attractive to talented and qualified workers from the world over.”

Talks between the two parties last week went into a second round after leaders acknowledged the drafts prepared so far fell far short of what was needed for a government programme. Merz has said he wants to form a government by Easter.


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Merz, the likely next chancellor, won the February 23 election but with a poorer-than-expected 28.5% of the vote. That left the SPD as Merz’s only possible partner if he sticks to his pledge not to cooperate with the runner-up far-right AfD party, or form an unstable three-way coalition as Scholz did.

Leaked drafts of coalition negotiating positions show the parties far apart on immigration policy. The conservatives demand more powers to expel and turn away migrants, while the SPD is focusing on the integration of migrants and steps to recruit foreign skilled workers for labour-short German industries.

Concerns that commitments on migration and fiscal rigour could be watered down under the next government have preoccupied right-wing voters in particular – the AfD has gained three points in the polls since the election while the conservatives have lost three.

A series of deadly street attacks during the election campaign, blamed in some cases on foreigners illegally present in Germany, ensured the contest was dominated by a raw and angry debate over migration.

“We must carry out the migration debate without rancour, always in the awareness that we’re talking about people here,” said Faeser, who could stay on as interior minister or in another senior cabinet role if a conservative-SPD “grand coalition” comes to fruition.

(With inputs from Reuters)