Berlin.
The guests at Maischberger think that money for the municipalities does not solve the asylum problems. An FDP man takes a different approach.

A billion euros. The federal government wants to make this much additional money available to the municipalities in 2023 to provide adequate care for refugees who come to Germany. The federal and state governments agreed on this result at the refugee summit on Thursday after months of dispute. So was that a successful day, Sandra Maischberger asks her panel of experts in the evening on ARD.

“Maischberger”: Those were the guests

  • Cem Ozdemir (Grüne)Federal Minister of Agriculture
  • Markus Soeder (CSU)Bavarian Prime Minister
  • Ulrich Wickertformer “Daily Topics” moderator
  • Robin Alexander, deputy “Welt” editor-in-chief
  • Yasmine M’Barek“Zeit” journalist

Hardly, thinks the deputy world editor-in-chief Robin Alexander: “A solution for the Conflict is simply not there. ”Scholz had to save and had his will enforced today in order to comply with the debt brake in the budget. “Scholz said: Wait, money is all,” says Alexander. However, the actual problem, namely the lack of resources to adequately care for and integrate all refugees, has not been addressed by the politicians. “Even if you solve the problem with money, you will reach other limits over time. When there is no house and no teacher, it doesn’t matter who pays.”






more on the subject: Asylum policy – ​​So many refugees live in Germany


Asylum policy at Maischberger: “Municipalities will continue to suffer”

Zeit editor Yasmine M’Barek also sees today’s result as merely a postponement of the problem. You have to “meet again and again in the next few months to ask how things are going”. The two journalists are not the only ones who would only attest the asylum summit as inadequate. “I think it was a peak of disappointment,” says Dietmar Bartsch, the parliamentary group leader of the left. It happened exactly what Scholz wanted, a right solution refugee policy however, one has not come a step closer. “The municipalities will continue to suffer from the current position,” says Bartsch, who is expecting violent arguments over the next few weeks.

Read the comment: Refugee summit in the chancellery: Fatal tugging for money

FDP man Christian Dürr sees a different approach. Instead of more money, he would like to talk directly about a new migration policy. “Germany needs immigration, but on the labour market“, he explains at Maischberger. That’s why you have to make it much easier for people who want to come to Germany to work and integrate. “And those who have no prospects here must unfortunately have a harder time.” In his opinion, immigration into Germany’s social security systems must be limited. He therefore advocates, among other things, the introduction of benefits in kind instead of cash benefits for refugees. Considerations that Bartsch does not share. People would not flee Africa because there are hefty cash benefits in Germany. “That’s absurd,” says Bartsch.

Elections in Turkey: Özdemir expresses concern

But the refugee summit is not the only major political event of the week. Both Turkish parliamentary and presidential elections Next Sunday a decision will be made as to whether incumbent President Recep Tayyip Erdogan can continue his authoritarian course or whether the opposition will be given a chance to democratize the country. Sandra Maischberger invited Federal Agriculture Minister Cem Özdemir (Greens) to her program to talk about the effects of the election outcome. Around 64 million eligible voters are called upon to vote. Among the Turks living in Germany, turnout was 48.8 percent by Tuesday evening.

Also read: Türkiye election – This is how Erdogan uses the earthquake for his purposes

Özdemir, who describes himself as an Anatolian Swabian, has launched an appeal to the Turks living in Germany to do their part to have Erdogan voted out. “He became more authoritarian with every election,” emphasizes the politician, who has feared since 2016 that Turkey Developed step by step into a modern dictatorship. “If Erdogan wins, the division in society would deepen,” he emphasizes at Maischberger. And Turkey might move further away from Europe.




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