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Oct 22, 2025

Vice-Chancellor Klingbeil Rebukes Chancellor Merz over ‘Cityscape’ Migration Comments

Vice-Chancellor Klingbeil Rebukes Chancellor Merz over ‘Cityscape’ Migration Comments
Germany’s coalition tensions over immigration burst into the open on 22 October 2025 when Vice-Chancellor and Finance Minister Lars Klingbeil (SPD) publicly criticised Chancellor Friedrich Merz (CDU) for remarks suggesting that migrants were “changing the cityscape” and causing public unease. Addressing a trade-union congress in Hanover, Klingbeil said politics should “build bridges, not divide society with words,” joining more than 134,000 petition signatories demanding an apology.

Merz, speaking the same day in London, doubled down, warning that foreigners without permanent residence who are unemployed or law-breaking “cause problems” and fuel fear in public spaces. He nonetheless added that migrants are “an indispensable part of our labour market”—a nod to industry reliance on foreign talent.

The exchange underscores deep policy rifts within the centre-right/centre-left coalition just as the government prepares bills to scrap the three-year fast-track naturalisation option and to expand deportations of convicted offenders. SPD lawmakers fear that harsh rhetoric will erode social cohesion and deter the skilled workers Germany competes for globally.

For employers, the political infighting signals potential delays or amendments to pending legislation that would tighten family-reunification rules and raise language requirements. HR departments should monitor parliamentary debates and prepare contingency plans for slower naturalisation pathways affecting key staff.

The public outcry also highlights reputational considerations: companies may face tougher questions from international recruits about Germany’s openness. Clear internal messaging on diversity and inclusion—and practical support for affected employees—will be essential.
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