Green Party MPs in the Bundestag announce constitutional complaint against the 2025 federal budget over misused climate funds.
Green Party MPs in the Bundestag announce constitutional complaint against the 2025 federal budget over misused climate funds.
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Greens plan constitutional complaint against 2025 federal budget

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The Greens in the Bundestag plan to organize a constitutional complaint against the 2025 federal budget. They accuse the government of misusing billions of euros from a special fund for infrastructure and climate protection. Lacking votes for a norm control, they seek support from civil society.

In Berlin, Greens politicians announced plans to prepare a constitutional complaint at the Federal Constitutional Court in Karlsruhe against the 2025 federal budget. Deputy parliamentary group leader Andreas Audretsch criticized that the Union and SPD had misappropriated billions of euros and violated the Basic Law. "Billions that should have flowed into infrastructure and climate protection ended up 'in consumption and fossil past,'" he said. These allegations are supported by two legal opinions commissioned by the party.

The criticism focuses primarily on the credit-financed special fund for infrastructure and climate protection, amounting to 500 billion euros. The Greens accuse the federal government of not using the borrowing capacity for additional projects but instead diverting it on detours for "election gifts" like the mothers' pension. Greens budget expert Sebastian Schäfer stated that the investment ratio in the budget is calculated misleadingly.

The 2025 budget, with expenditures of 502.5 billion euros – 25 billion more than the previous year – was approved by the Bundestag on September 18, 2025, three months before year-end. The delay stemmed from the collapse of the traffic light coalition and a government change; a provisional budget had applied beforehand. The Bundesrat approved it at the end of September. The 2026 budget was passed at the end of November 2025.

Lacking the necessary votes in the Bundestag for a norm control, the constitutional complaint is the only option for the Greens. Citizens who feel their basic rights are violated can file it. "We will approach civil society to increase pressure on the federal government," Schäfer said. The initiative aims to ramp up pressure on the government, though a successful lawsuit is not guaranteed.

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On X, reactions to the Greens' planned constitutional complaint against the 2025 federal budget highlight accusations of unconstitutional misuse of billions from special funds for infrastructure and climate, bypassing the debt brake. Media outlets like Spiegel report on legal opinions backing the claim but emphasize difficulties in organizing support from civil society. Users criticize government spending practices, express surprise at budget hole-plugging, and discuss historical precedents, with sentiments ranging from supportive skepticism to outright condemnation.

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Lars Klingbeil presenting the 2027 budget with 204 billion euros in new debt.
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Klingbeil presents 2027 budget draft with 204 billion euros in new debt

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Federal Finance Minister Lars Klingbeil plans nearly 204 billion euros in new debt for 2027. The cabinet is set to approve the draft on Monday.

Greens politician Sebastian Schäfer asked Finance Minister Lars Klingbeil (SPD) for details on construction projects funded by the 500 billion euro infrastructure special fund. After nearly two months, the Federal Ministry of Finance provided mostly evasive answers without a proper overview. Critics accuse the government of misusing the debt-financed funds.

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The federal government faces delays in disbursing funds from the 500-billion-euro infrastructure special fund. Finance Minister Lars Klingbeil encounters bureaucratic hurdles and internal party issues.

Eight weeks after the Greens' narrow win in the March state election, they and the CDU have reached a coalition agreement in Baden-Württemberg. Top candidates Cem Özdemir and Manuel Hagel announced it in Stuttgart, with the treaty to be presented next week.

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The German federal government under Finance Minister Lars Klingbeil (SPD) failed to agree with the Union on budget savings. Instead, taxes on alcohol, tobacco, and cryptocurrencies are set to rise, with new levies on sugar and plastic. The measures appear in the 2027 budget draft to be presented to the cabinet on Wednesday.

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