Germany's conservative chancellor candidate Friedrich Merz explicitly distanced himself and his party from the far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD) in an interview with DW.
A photograph accompanying an article on January 31 showed members of Germany’s CDU party applauding Friedrich Merz, not members of the AfD as wrongly stated in the caption.
The centre-right CDU has been accused of breaking 'taboo' by putting forward a motion to the Bundestag for a stricter ...
As Germany enters the final few weeks of its election campaign, the man poised to be the next chancellor has doubled down on ...
The man likely to lead Germany's next government says there would be no cooperation with the far-right AfD. Friedrich Merz's conservative CDU/CSU bloc has faced flak after accepting AfD support on ...
BERLIN: Germany's conservative election front-runner Friedrich Merz was set to outline his plans on immigration and the ...
The front-runner in Germany’s upcoming election says the far-right Alternative for Germany is his “most important opponent” ...
In trying to avoid the mistakes of the past, Germany’s liberal politicians are pushing their country right back toward them. One of the most pointless cliches holds that “those who do not learn from ...
Comment: Christian Democratic Union leader Friedrich Merz risking a joint parliamentary vote with the far-right AfD was not a move to enable them. Indeed, his actions were designed to avoid further ...
Many economists have criticised the idea of subsidising electricity prices, arguing that efforts should instead focus on ...
As a strong economic region, we can shape our policies in response to tariffs with our own tariffs,' says Olaf Scholz - ...
The German Christian Democrats' candidate for chancellor, Friedrich Merz, is campaigning for a rapid and tangible change in ...