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Pension with 70: Cdu Minister Reiche Dares to Go to the Boomers – but Merz Lets Her Flash Off

Summary by merkur.de
Minister of Economic Affairs Reiche wants the Germans to work longer. Merz and the CDU don't join her. Whoever dares to retire is usually alone.

13 Articles

Lean Left

Under current law, the retirement age in Germany is 67 years.

·Belgrade, Serbia
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Lean Right

Federal Minister of Economics Katherina Reiche (CDU) is criticised for her proposal for a longer working life. FDP party chairman Christian Dürr now stands by her side – and reaffirms his own idea for a new pension system.

·Dortmund, Germany
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The future of the legal pension in Germany is facing challenges. Minister of Economic Affairs Katherina Reiche demands reforms for financing and stabilization.

·Munich, Germany
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Center

Minister of Economic Affairs Katharina Reiche calls for longer work – and thus suddenly stands alone on the ground. FOCUS online chief correspondent Ulrich Reitz explains why she is right, but does not get a chance – not even in her own party.

·Berlin, Germany
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Lean Right

Minister of Economy Katherina Reiche (CDU) ignored an internal announcement by CDU head Friedrich Merz with her push for a later retirement age. The background.

·Berlin, Germany
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Left

The Federal Minister for Economic Affairs, Katherina Reiche, finds that the Germans are going to retire too early. The Federal Government affirms that an increase in the retirement age is not planned.

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Bias Distribution

  • 43% of the sources lean Left
43% Left

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merkur.de broke the news in on Monday, July 28, 2025.
Sources are mostly out of (0)