The Bundestag repealed a fast-track citizenship law, signaling reduced immigration support amid demographic decline.
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article author: AFPID: 1759949126061224100Wed, 2025-10-08 21:48 BERLIN: The German parliament on Wednesday repealed a fast-track citizenship law introduced by the previous government, highlighting the souring public mood toward immigration in the country. The measure made it possible to apply for German citizenship after three years, rather than the usual five, for those who could show they had integrated particularly well. It was introduced by the previous government, led by the center-left SPD party, who argued it would attract more overseas workers to plug labor shortages in many industries.Main category: WorldTags: Germanycitizenshipillegal migration
The Bundestag repealed a fast-track citizenship law, signaling reduced immigration support amid demographic decline.
Germany will no longer offer citizenship after three years of residency. Interior Minister Alexander Dobrindt, of the center-right Christian Social...
A survey by German media found that fewer than 1,000 people had applied to the programme.
Germany's parliament has scrapped a fast-track citizenship law, a key policy of the previous government. The move, supported by the opposition AfD,...
Germany will no longer offer citizenship after three years of residency. Interior Minister Alexander Dobrindt, of the center-right Christian Social...
Germany’s parliament repealed the fast-track citizenship law, extending residency requirements to five years, amid debates over migration,...
Germany has rolled back its new law offering a fast-tracked citizenship after only three years, which had been in place since 2024. Conservative...
Germany’s parliament on Wednesday rescinded a fast-track citizenship programme, reflecting the rapidly shifting mood on migration in Europe’s...
Crossing fast-track citizenship off the books was a key migration-related election campaign promise from Chancellor Merz's CDU. Critics argue that...
Friedrich Merz’s conservatives had pledged to rescind legislation, which allowed citizenship in three years instead of five