
Merkel criticizes leader of her own party for cooperating with German far right
Former German Chancellor Angela Merkel criticized Friedrich Merz, her successor as leader of the country's conservatives, on Thursday for pushing through a bill on tighter immigration control with the help of the far right.
'I believe it is wrong,' Merkel said, referring to the outcome of a vote in parliament on Wednesday when a Christian Democrat motion was passed with support from the nationalist Alternative for Germany (AfD), breaking a long-held political taboo in Germany.
Holocaust survivor Albrecht Weinberg, who survived Auschwitz and Bergen-Belsen, returned his Federal Order of Merit medal to the German state in protest, while Michel Friedman, a Jewish community leader and member of the CDU's presidency in the 1990s, quit the party.
Berlin mayor Kai Wegener, a fellow conservative, also indicated dissatisfaction.
'With me - you can rely on it - there will never be cooperation or a coalition with the far-right,' he said.
Christian Democrat leader Merz, frontrunner to become chancellor after the February 23 election, rejected suggestions he had breached mainstream parties' 'firewall' against the AfD, saying his bill was necessary, regardless of who chose to back it.
In a rare intervention into domestic politics, Merkel accused Merz of going back on a vow he made in November to seek majorities with mainstream parties rather than with the AfD.
She urged 'democratic parties' to work together to prevent violent attacks like those recently seen in Magdeburg and Aschaffenburg. In both instances, the suspects had applied for asylum in Germany, bringing border and asylum policy into sharp focus in the election campaign.
The AfD, which is polling second in most surveys behind Merz's conservative bloc, is being monitored by German security services on suspicion of right-wing extremism.
Thousands protested outside the CDU party's Berlin headquarters on Thursday, prompting the police to urge staff to leave work early for their own safety, a party official wrote on social media.
Addressing a rally in Dresden, Merz told protesters they were over-reacting.
'The right to demonstrate only goes so far,' he said, adding that Chancellor Olaf Scholz's Social Democrats and the Greens represented a 'dwindling minority' in society.
The job of the conservatives, he said, was to ensure 'a party like the AfD is no longer needed in Germany.'
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Also on this day, General Thomas Gage, military governor of the Massachusetts colony, issued a proclamation that sought to undercut the growing fervor, resources, and activities of the patriots around Boston. He called on the residents of the colonies to give up their rebellion and resist the rebels, who, he said, 'with a wantonness of cruelty ever incident to lawless tumult, carry depredation and distress wherever they turn their steps.' In it, he offered amnesty -- 'to spare the effusion of blood' -- to all who lay down their guns except Samuel Adams and John Hancock. The proclamation had an opposite reaction to its intent, galvanizing instead of disarming the patriots. In 1939, the Baseball Hall of Fame was dedicated in Cooperstown, N.Y. Advertisement In 1942, Anne Frank, a German-born Jewish girl living in Amsterdam, received a diary for her 13th birthday, less than a month before she and her family went into hiding from the Nazis. Advertisement In 1963, civil rights leader Medgar Evers, 37, was shot and killed outside his home in Jackson, Miss. (In 1994, Byron De La Beckwith was convicted of murdering Evers and sentenced to life in prison, where he died in 2001.) In 1964, eight South African anti-apartheid activists, including Nelson Mandela, were sentenced to life in prison for committing acts of sabotage against South Africa' apartheid government. In 1967, the US Supreme Court, in Loving v. Virginia, unanimously struck down state laws prohibiting interracial marriages, ruling that such laws violated the 14thAmendment. In 1978, David Berkowitz was sentenced to 25 years to life in prison for each of the six 'Son of Sam' killings committed in New York City over the previous two years. In 1987, President Ronald Reagan, during a visit to the divided German city of Berlin, exhorted Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev to 'tear down this wall.' In 1991, Russians went to the polls for their first-ever presidential election, which resulted in victory for Boris Yeltsin. In 1994, Nicole Brown Simpson and Ronald Goldman were killed outside Simpson's Los Angeles home. (O.J. Simpson, Nicole Brown Simpson's ex-husband, was later acquitted of the killings in a criminal trial, but was eventually held liable in a civil action.) In 2010, Daniel Nava hit the first pitch he saw as a big leaguer for a grand slam — only the second player to do it — leading the Boston Red Sox to a 10-2 rout of the Philadelphia Phillies. In 2016, a gunman opened fire at Pulse, a gay nightclub in Orlando, Fla., leaving 49 people dead and 53 wounded in what was then the deadliest mass shooting in US history; the gunman, Omar Mateen, pledged allegiance to the Islamic State group during a three-hour standoff before being killed in a shootout with police. Advertisement