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The conservative policies of Friedrich Merz

The conservative Christian Democratic Union in Germany (CDU) along with its Bavarian sister party, the CSU, won the elections on Sunday. They are likely to form the next coalition government.

Here is a list of the key positions they took in their election campaign:

ECONOMY

CDU wants to reduce red tape, encourage investment and lower energy prices in order to boost the economy.

The government wants to reduce electricity taxes, grid fees and expand research on renewable energy, nuclear power and power storage. It wants to abolish Germany's Supply Chain Due Diligence Law.

The party pledges to support the industry by digitalisation, cloud applications, and sovereign AI. The party will establish a Digital Ministry and a "Startup Protection Zone", which would shield new businesses from red tape.

FINANCE

The CDU would like to reduce corporate tax from 29.9% to maximum 25%. The CDU wants to keep a tax break for married couples, and increase tax breaks for children.

Other parties have criticised CDU for not explaining how it would finance all of the tax cuts promised.

CDU pledges to keep Germany's debt-brake, a constitutional tool that limits the federal government deficit to just 0.35%. It has been criticized for hindering investment. The party leader Friedrich Merz left the door wide open for reforming the debt brake, but did not specify how.

MIGRATION AND BORDER TRAFFIC

CDU supports stricter border controls and faster asylum processing. It also advocates deportation of those who do not have legal residency. It proposes a reform to the European Asylum Law, arguing that asylum applications should be processed outside the EU in safe third-country jurisdictions.

The party wants to limit the social benefits of those who are required to leave. It also wants to expand the list safe countries of origin and suspend policies that allow families of refugees to move into Germany with subsidiary protection status.

The bill also seeks to reverse the government's policy of rapid naturalization and prohibit dual citizenship.

The CDU also plans to simplify recognition of foreign professional qualification and create a "Work-and-Stay Agency", a digital platform that will streamline visas, residence permits, and recruitment for foreign skilled workers.

SECURITY

The CDU supports stronger law enforcement, including tougher punishments, faster legal proceedings, increased surveillance in high-risk areas, and more aggressive prosecutions.

It promises to take stronger action against extremists on the right and left.

FOREIGN POLICY

CDU has committed to spending at least 2% of the gross domestic product (GDP) on defence, which is the NATO minimum. It is committed to reintroducing mandatory military service, and leading an initiative for a European Missile Defence System.

Merz said earlier this month that he was open to discussing options for financing an increase in defence spending.

It calls for stronger transatlantic relations with the U.S., and a renewed partnership with France and Poland. It supports Ukraine with humanitarian, financial and military assistance, as well as diplomatic, financial and political support. It supports Israel, and it backs the two-state solution.

The party wants to reduce reliance on China.

CLIMATE

The CDU's "Yes to Cars", policy opposes measures like inner-city driving restrictions, reduced parking spaces, and an overall highway speed limit.

The report advocates lifting the EU planned ban on combustion engines, reviewing fleet emissions limits, and preventing penalities for carmakers who fail to meet emission targets, while also expanding charging infrastructure for electric vehicles.

The party wants to repeal the law that gradually phases out domestic heating with oil and gas, but it supports tax incentives on energy-efficient home renovations. The party also proposes to reinstate agricultural diesel subsidies as well as promote emissions trading.

SOCIAL POLICIES

CDU wants to increase housing supply through a simplified building code, expanded construction zones, and social housing investments.

The government wants to introduce compulsory preschool language tests to measure German proficiency. It also promises to increase student financial aid, child benefits and tax exemptions.

The report proposes increasing childcare access, increasing the tax deductions, and reversing last year's law that reduced regulations on gender transitions. (Reporting and editing by Riham Alkousaa, Maria Martinez and Alexandra Hudson; Bernadettebaum and Matthias Williams)

(source: Reuters)