What Is Germany's 'Migration Turnaround' Actually Achieving?
12 Articles
12 Articles
CSU Interior Minister Dobrindt takes a positive balance on migration. However, the number of deportations is falling – and his border controls have a downside.
A year ago, the Federal Government announced a booming course in migration policy. Since then, the number of asylums has fallen. But is this really a consequence of the changed policy?
The coalition of Christian Democrats and Social Democrats has been in power in Germany for a year. Federal Minister of the Interior Alexander Dobrint claims that during that time he implemented a "turnaround in migration policy". What did he do?
The German government's promised migration turnaround threatens to fail. While a large city continues to migrate every year, the number of deportations declines. A party in particular benefits from this.
The Federal Government did little in the first year. The Chancellor and his Minister of the Interior are all the more proud of the decline in asylum seekers.
Federal Minister of the Interior Alexander Dobrindt draws an asylum record: more rejections, fewer deportations, new hardship.
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- 38% of the sources lean Left, 37% of the sources lean Right
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