Pressure builds on Merkel to close borders as support slides

A group of conservative lawmakers urged Angela Merkel to reverse her open-door refugee policy as a poll showed a slide in support for her bloc on Tuesday, raising the stakes for a German chancellor exposed by deep rifts in her right-left coalition.

Conservative allies in Bavaria, the entry point for most migrants, are regularly breaking ranks and criticism is also mounting from her Social Democrat (SPD) coalition partners. Some media have even started to speculate about Merkel’s future.

An INSA poll in Tuesday’s top-selling Bild newspaper showed support for Merkel’s conservative bloc down 2.5 percentage points at 32.5%, its lowest since the 2013 election.

It also put the right-wing Alternative for Germany (AfD), which campaigns against refugees, up 1 point at 12.5%.

The AfD has gained from worries about migrants, exacerbated by sexual attacks on women in Cologne and other cities at New Year blamed largely on asylum seekers, and is likely to make big gains in elections in three states in March.

Merkel’s insistence that Germany will cope with the influx of 1.1m migrants last year and more this year, has angered local authorities struggling to house people, many fleeing war zones in Syria and other Middle East countries.

Pressure is mounting on her to shut the borders five months after Germany opened its doors to asylum seekers from Syria, effectively suspending EU rules.

In a letter to Merkel, 44 conservatives - many from her own Christian Democrats (CDU) as well as Bavaria’s Christian Social Union (CSU) - urged Merkel to change course.

One of the initiators of the letter said a total of about 100 conservative lawmakers backed it.

The letter is just the latest headache for Merkel. The CSU wants a cap on migrants and some members are talking about taking the government to the Constitutional Court.

‘Helpless’

The Social Democrats (SPD), at odds with conservatives on planned new rules on migrants, are also stepping up criticism.

Conservatives fear Merkel’s attempts to persuade other EU countries to take in quotas of refugees, push for reception centres to be built on Europe’s external borders and pay Turkey to keep refugees from entering the bloc are not working.

There are signs that Merkel, traditionally known for her pragmatic approach, is hearing at least some of the criticism but she has remained firm in resisting a cap.

Last December she reassured her CDU that the number of migrants would fall. Her government is trying to speed up asylum procedures and make it easier to deport failed asylum seekers.

Coalition officials said on Monday Germany wanted to limit migration from North Africa by declaring Morocco, Algeria and Tunisia ‘safe countries’.

Merkel still enjoys higher ratings than most post-war German chancellors and with no clear successor in sight, it is still widely expected that Merkel will stand in the 2017 federal elections.