German Interior Minister Dobrindt at press conference announcing asylum seekers can work after 3 months instead of 6, with hopeful workers in foreground.
German Interior Minister Dobrindt at press conference announcing asylum seekers can work after 3 months instead of 6, with hopeful workers in foreground.
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Dobrindt plans shorter wait for working asylum seekers

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Federal Interior Minister Alexander Dobrindt (CSU) aims to ease the employment ban for asylum seekers, allowing them to work after three instead of six months. The proposal is praised by the German Institute for Economic Research (DIW) and the SPD, while the Union sees limited impact. The announcement contrasts with planned cuts to integration courses.

Alexander Dobrindt, the CSU Federal Interior Minister, announced over the weekend plans to ease the employment ban for asylum seekers. In the future, they should be allowed to work after just three months, even if their asylum procedure is ongoing and they have not yet been recognized as refugees. This is part of his 'Sofort-in-Arbeit-Plan' and aims to facilitate integration.

Economist Marcel Fratzscher from the DIW and the SPD welcome the step. Fratzscher praises the initiative as sensible, as it helps asylum seekers integrate into society, build social contacts, and relieve the labor market. The measure eases the burden on municipalities' social spending and addresses the shortage of skilled workers. The Union, however, emphasizes a limited effect.

The announcement seems surprising, given Dobrindt's previous focus on restrictive measures in migration policy to counter the AfD. It serves to gain SPD approval for the national implementation of the Common European Asylum System (GEAS). This system provides for processing asylum claims for individuals with low recognition chances at EU external borders, including those from countries like Egypt or Turkey.

A contradiction arises with a recent announcement: Dobrindt plans cuts to funding for language and integration courses. Such cuts, according to critics, hinder success in the job market, as language skills are essential.

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X discussions on Dobrindt's plan to reduce the asylum seeker employment ban to three months show mixed reactions: praise for promoting integration and economic relief from users and economists (DIW), support from SPD noted; skepticism from journalists on contradicting integration course cuts and limited impact; calls for work obligations or faster asylum decisions from critics.

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Chancellor Merz at press conference softening Syrian return policy stance as AfD's Weidel demands action.
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Merz softens stance on Syrian returns as AfD pushes for action

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One day after announcing that up to 80 percent of Syrians in Germany should return home, Chancellor Friedrich Merz has distanced himself from the figure. He now emphasizes coordination with Syrian President Ahmed al-Scharaa. AfD leader Alice Weidel calls for immediate returns and a naturalization moratorium, while critics highlight integration and security concerns.

The chair of the Interior Ministers' Conference, Andy Grote, has called for lower legal hurdles for deporting criminal refugees ahead of the federal-state meeting.

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Federal Building Minister Verena Hubertz announced cuts that will affect all recipients. One third of households could lose eligibility.

German Chancellor Friedrich Merz urged the SPD to demonstrate greater willingness for reforms. In a speech to the CDU Wirtschaftsrat in Berlin, he warned of limits to his patience. He criticized the SPD for 'dreaming' of democratic socialism.

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Four months before the state election in Saxony-Anhalt, the AfD is preparing a comprehensive personnel overhaul in ministries and authorities. Top candidate Ulrich Siegmund considers 150 to 200 positions realistic. The party fears resistance from the existing administrative apparatus.

Top representatives of Germany's black-red coalition from CDU, CSU and SPD concluded their two-day talks on energy prices and social-tax reforms late Sunday night at Villa Borsig near Berlin. No results were disclosed immediately. It remains unclear if announcements will follow on Monday.

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