The German parliament has narrowly rejected a bill to restrict immigration proposed by the opposition conservatives with the support of the far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD), averting the prospect of a law passing for the first time in modern German history thanks to the backing of the far right.

On Friday, after an unusually heated debate delayed by long and unsuccessful negotiations on a compromise between mainstream parties, the bill was rejected by 350 votes to 338, with five abstentions.

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Germany is set to hold snap elections on February 23 after the collapse of Chancellor Olaf Scholz’s coalition last year. Opposition leader Friedrich Merz has put demands for a more restrictive approach to migration at the centre of his campaign since a deadly knife attack last week by a rejected asylum-seeker.

On Wednesday, conservatives from his Christian Democratic Union/Christian Social Union in Bavaria (CDU/CSU) passed a non-binding motion calling for an immigration crackdown, with backing by the AfD.

This move was widely criticised by the public and politicians who said it endangered mainstream parties’ “firewall” against far-right parties.

Even former German Chancellor Angela Merkel, who rarely comments on politics since her retirement, slammed Merz’s decision as “wrong”. Thousands of protesters also gathered on Thursday outside the headquarters in Berlin of Merz’s CDU. Other demonstrations were held elsewhere in Germany.

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During Friday’s debate on Merz’s bill, German Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock, a Green, said, “You don’t have to tear down a firewall with a wrecking ball to set your own house on fire. It’s enough to keep drilling holes.”

“First a motion on Wednesday, then a bill today — what’s coming next?”

Merz said, “You can’t seriously believe that we are reaching out our hand to a party that wants to destroy us?”

He said he will “do everything in the coming weeks, months and if necessary years so that this party doesn’t continue to grow and becomes a peripheral phenomenon again as soon as possible”.

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