The German parliament has refused to take the far -right immigration of immigration by conservative opposition.
Friedrich Melz, the leader of the Christian Democratic Union (CDU), who is tilted to become the next Prime Minister of Germany, tried to rely on the support from the German (AFD) party in a week. The bill was defeated with 350 votes. 338.
The strategy was widely accused of Melz’s predecessor, CDU leader, as the former Prime Minister Angela Merkel.
Melz said he defended his actions as “necessary” and did not seek the party’s support.
“Just because the wrong people agree to it doesn’t mean the right decision is wrong,” he said.
CDU leaders hoped to have a more severe attitude toward immigration, but his dependence on this voting could lose more moderate voters.
Thousands of people took them to a city of Germany on Thursday night and opposed the far right CDU.
The CDU is leading voting prior to the German SNAP election next month. AFD is currently voting second, but MERZ excludes all kinds of coalitions with them.
Wednesday voting showed unconventional motions over the change of immigration law passing the parliament. Friday voting was based on a bill aimed at suppressing the number of immigrants and the right of family reunion.
The proposed law was opposed by the current Prime Minister Orafshortz, including the Social Democratic Party (SPD). Sorz is one of the people who criticized Meltz’s dependence on AFD, calling it a “unacceptable mistake.”
“More than 75 years ago, since its establishment of the German Federal Republic, our parliament has always had a clear consensus among all the Democrats.
In a rare political intervention, Melkel said that Melz had broken the pledge conducted in November to cooperate with SDP and Green to pass the law instead of AFD. She described the pledge as “expression of political responsibility of a great nation.”
On Wednesday, AFD leader Alice Wydel blamed the mainstream political party to neglect German voters by refusing to work with her party.
The AFD section is classified as a right -wing extremist by domestic information.
Another difficult debate on German immigrants has been a desire for asylum, and has recently burned up with a series of fatal attacks in the city of Asshaffenberg.
This was a central problem of the election campaign. This was caused by the collapse of the Chaltz’s rule.