She's got a good excuse to roll back her welcome allcomers policy now.
Incidentally.
Does Germany do anything to help solve that particular problem at source?
At least the proper negotiations can start now
How long do you think she's got before resigning after all she only got 32% of the vote were as tm got 42% and all you hear is she must go
Ah yes, but, you see... she isn't British, so they won't slag her off.How long do you think she's got before resigning after all she only got 32% of the vote were as tm got 42% and all you hear is she must go
This afd crowd, are they related to ukip?
http://edition.cnn.com/2017/09/25/europe/german-election-result-afd-walkout/index.html
Almost certainly,what a lame duck she has turned out to beWhat will she promise the Greens to get them in her coalition? Glyphosphate bans and lots of other anti-science nonsense no doubt......
I have no idea but the circumstances they find themselves in are similar.
As alluded to many times, if you don't like your current relationship with the EU, there is little choice for a vote to reflect this without voting far-right.
There will be many more who would hold this view who would not vote this way. We were lucky to have had UKIP to differentiate between the two although its opponents were desperate to portray them as the same thing.
The shared circumstance is when any 'outside' party becomes successful. It lacks the experience and then suffers power struggles to put the meat on the bones of ideas that up until that point, only needed to be an idea.
The rise of the far right vote is a worry, but not as worrying as the reaction, in almost every case, by those in power. In Germany today they said they would be all joining together to snuff them [afd] out. They need to identify and address the issue pushing people to vote this way.
If she and the potential alternative left of centre coalition both refuse to include the AFD one of them would have to govern as a minority. Only a further CDU/SDP coalition can get her to a majority.