Germany’s German chancellor is to resume cruise control

Advertisement

Supported by

Played through protesters, but supposedly protected from survey pain, Friedrich Merz puts a failed immigration gambit.

By Jim Tankersley and Tatiana First

Stromberg report, Germany

Right next to the road, radiating to a crowd at peak time, and the spirit of Friedrich Merz had directed the velocimeters.

“If you recently bought a new car, have you seen what of the automatic systems supplied now?” The guy at the driver’s headquarters to be Gerguyy’s next chancellor asked Friday afternoon. “If you drive two kilometers consistent with the time too fast, the thing starts in BIP. “

These beeps are the product of the regulation of the European Union. For Mr. Merz, they were an appropriate and orderly example of government intrusions that blamed for having masked the German economy and frustrating its citizens.

They were also a practical series in the disorders that Mr. Merz hopes to rest, such as the chair of a leather captain the last segment before the German legislative elections of February 23.

Mr. Merz and his party, Christian Democratic conservatives, endured two nervous weeks after taking a political commitment and breaking an old taboo decades voting with right to the right in a failed attempt to harden the legislation on migration.

The protest continued. The rival applicants felt an opening. But Hubbub surveys imply that Mr. Merz gave the unscathed impression. Even if it is now considered a more polarizing figure, the former entrepreneur and faithful conservative for a long time turns out to the court.

We have recovering the content of the article.

JavaScript turn on in the configuration of your browser.

Thanks for your patience while we review access. If you are in reading mode, leave and attach to your Times account, or subscribe to all the time.

Thanks for your patience while we review access.

Already signed?  Connect.

Do you want all the time?  Subscribe.

Advertisement

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *