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News / Nation & World

Merkel backs German full-veil ban in pitch to CDU members

By Patrick Donahue, Arne Delfs and Matthew Miller, Bloomberg
Published: December 6, 2016, 11:03am

Chancellor Angela Merkel called for a ban on full-face veils and said she’ll protect Germany against future refugee waves, reaching out to critics of her liberal migration policy as she asked a convention of her Christian Democratic Union to back her bid for a fourth term.

CDU delegates erupted in applause and cheers after Merkel gave her strongest backing yet to a ban on clothing such as the burqa worn by Muslim women. Even so, delegates re-elected Merkel as party chairwoman with the lowest support of her 11 years as chancellor, with 89.5 percent voting in favor compared with 96.7 percent two years ago.

“We show our faces,” Merkel, 62, said in an 80-minute convention speech in the western city of Essen on Tuesday. “Full-face covering is not appropriate with us — it should be banned.” She also said the mass influx of asylum seekers such as the estimated 890,000 who entered the country in 2015 “should never be repeated.”

After more than a year in which the chancellor has faced criticism for her open-borders position on refugees, Merkel told delegates she thought hard about whether to run again and it wasn’t “a trivial decision.” Looking ahead to federal elections next fall, she positioned herself and her party as pillars of stability in a region buffeted by a rise in populist movements aiming to displace established parties.

At the same time, she said she wants Germany to be a tolerant, diverse country that’s open to the world, including the global economy, and compassionate toward people in need of shelter.

“The world hasn’t become stronger in 2016, but weaker and less certain,” she said.

Among those targeted for criticism by the chancellor were financial markets and “big corporations” that seek to minimize their taxes, whose practices she said breed cynicism and have “nothing to do with a social market economy.”

“Every financial center, every financial product must be subject to regulation,” Merkel said.

A group of CDU officials last summer put pressure on Merkel to adopt language calling for a ban on veils that cover a woman’s face and body. After a debate in the party about the legal feasibility of a ban, a compromise called for bans in certain public places.

Merkel’s stance “was something our delegates wanted to hear,” Jens Spahn, a deputy finance minister and member of the CDU’s national leadership, said in a Bloomberg Television interview. “It was very clear that we don’t want full veils here in Germany.”

Merkel’s speech put her publicly in line with the full party leadership’s draft resolution for the convention, which says: “We reject full covering. We want to ban it using all legal possibilities, just as we do for under-age marriage.”

While the CDU leads in all national polls, Merkel is facing some of the strongest headwinds of her chancellorship as she seeks a fourth term. Her only lower score as party chairwoman was 88.4 percent in 2004 when she was opposition leader. Among the obstacles ahead is meshing refugee policy with calls by Christian Social Union for a cap on migration.

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