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Merkel’s ally Horst Seehofer may quit over migrants

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German Interior Minister and Bavarian Christian Social Union (CSU) politician Horst Seehofer may resign after disagreeing with Angela Merkel's immigration policy. AFP PHOTO
German Interior Minister and Bavarian Christian Social Union (CSU) politician Horst Seehofer may resign after disagreeing with Angela Merkel's immigration policy. AFP PHOTO

German Interior Minister and Bavarian Christian Social Union (CSU) politician Horst Seehofer may resign after disagreeing with Angela Merkel’s immigration policy.
AFP PHOTO

Germany’s interior minister has offered to resign over Angela Merkel’s EU deal to tackle immigration, reports say.

Horst Seehofer, leader of the Christian Social Union (CSU), a key party in Mrs Merkel’s coalition, has grown increasingly angry at her position on immigration.

Last week he threatened to turn asylum seekers away from Germany’s borders unless Mrs Merkel reached an acceptable deal with other EU partners.

His stance put Mrs Merkel’s coalition and her political future in question.

Late on Sunday, Mrs Merkel’s Christian Democratic Union (CDU) passed a resolution supporting her position on migration. CDU General Secretary Annegret Kramp-Karrenbauer said the party believed a European solution was necessary.

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But separate reports from sources within the CDU’s Bavarian sister party, the CSU, indicated Mr Seehofer had offered to resign both as leader of the CSU and as interior minister.

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The sources said that in Sunday’s closed-door meeting Mr Seehofer complained he had held a “conversation with no effect” with Mrs Merkel when they held talks on Saturday about the EU deal on migration, AFP news agency reports.

He wants to step down because he enjoys “no support”, the sources added.

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It was also reported that senior figures were trying to persuade Mr Seehofer not to step down, including CSU parliamentary group chief Alexander Dobrindt.

Mrs Merkel had previously given a more up-beat account of Saturday’s meeting, telling broadcaster ZDF that she had made concessions to Mr Seehofer.

She also expressed hope that the CDU and CSU could continue working together “because we are a success story for Germany”.

Both parties spent Sunday discussing the deal on immigration that Mrs Merkel fought hard to reach at last week’s European Union summit.

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She said Greece and Spain had agreed to take back migrants stopped at the Bavarian-Austrian border who are proven to have entered their countries first – a move she hoped would allay Mr Seehofer’s concerns.

But the divisions within the German government over the issue are also being played out in other EU countries, and this was reflected in the vague wording of Friday’s deal.

Correspondents say Mr Seehofer’s decision to confront Mrs Merkel over migration appeared linked to state elections in the autumn in which the CSU faces a challenge from the far-right anti-migrant Alternative for Germany (AfD) party.

However, opinion polls have suggested that Bavarians are more satisfied with Mrs Merkel than the CSU leader, weakening Mr Seehofer’s position.

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