Current:Home > StocksGerman parliament approves easing rules to get citizenship, dropping restrictions on dual passports -Elevate Capital Network
German parliament approves easing rules to get citizenship, dropping restrictions on dual passports
View
Date:2025-04-15 12:18:03
BERLIN (AP) — German lawmakers on Friday approved legislation easing the rules on gaining citizenship and ending restrictions on holding dual citizenship. The government argues the plan will bolster the integration of immigrants and help attract skilled workers.
Parliament voted 382-234 for the plan put forward by center-left Chancellor Olaf Scholz’s socially liberal coalition, with 23 lawmakers abstaining. The main center-right opposition bloc criticized the project vehemently, arguing that it would cheapen German citizenship.
The legislation will make people eligible for citizenship after five years in Germany, or three in case of “special integration accomplishments,” rather than eight or six years at present. German-born children would automatically become citizens if one parent has been a legal resident for five years, down from eight years now.
Restrictions on holding dual citizenship will also be dropped. In principle, most people from countries other than European Union members and Switzerland now have to give up their previous nationality when they gain German citizenship, though there are some exemptions.
The government says that 14% of the population — more than 12 million of the country’s 84.4 million inhabitants — doesn’t have German citizenship and that about 5.3 million of those have lived in Germany for at least a decade. It says that the naturalization rate in Germany is well below the EU average.
In 2022, about 168,500 people were granted German citizenship. That was the highest figure since 2002, boosted by a large increase in the number of Syrian citizens who had arrived in the past decade being naturalized, but still only a fraction of long-term residents.
Interior Minister Nancy Faeser said the reform puts Germany in line with European neighbors such as France and pointed to its need to attract more skilled workers. “We also must make qualified people from around the world an offer like the U.S., like Canada, of which acquiring German citizenship is a part,” she told reporters ahead of the vote.
The legislation stipulates that people being naturalized must be able to support themselves and their relatives, though there are exemptions for people who came to West Germany as “guest workers” up to 1974 and for those who came to communist East Germany to work.
The existing law requires that would-be citizens be committed to the “free democratic fundamental order,” and the new version specifies that antisemitic and racist acts are incompatible with that.
The conservative opposition asserted that Germany is loosening citizenship requirements just as other countries are tightening theirs.
“This isn’t a citizenship modernization bill — it is a citizenship devaluation bill,” center-right Christian Democrat Alexander Throm told lawmakers.
People who have been in Germany for five or three years haven’t yet grown roots in the country, he said. And he argued that dropping restrictions on dual citizenship will “bring political conflicts from abroad into our politics.”
The citizenship law overhaul is one of a series of social reforms that Scholz’s three-party coalition agreed to carry out when it took office in late 2021. Those also include plans to liberalize rules on the possession and sale of cannabis, and make it easier for transgender, intersex and nonbinary people to change their gender and name in official registers. Both still need parliamentary approval.
In recent months, the government — which has become deeply unpopular as a result of persistent infighting, economic weakness and most recently a home-made budget crisis that resulted in spending and subsidy cuts — also has sought to defuse migration by asylum-seekers as a political problem.
The citizenship reform was passed the day after lawmakers approved legislation that is intended to ease deportations of unsuccessful asylum-seekers.
veryGood! (3)
Related
- Elon Musk’s Daughter Vivian Calls Him “Absolutely Pathetic” and a “Serial Adulterer”
- So fetch! New 'Mean Girls' movie tops quiet weekend with $11.7M at the weekend box office
- Turkey investigates 8 bodies that washed up on its Mediterranean coast, including at a resort
- Adrián Beltré is a Hall of Fame lock. How close to unanimous will it be?
- Mega Millions winning numbers for August 6 drawing: Jackpot climbs to $398 million
- Sarah Ferguson, Duchess of York, Diagnosed With Skin Cancer After Breast Cancer Battle
- Surprise ‘SNL’ guest Rachel McAdams asks Jacob Elordi for acting advice: ‘Give up’
- Jamaica cracks down on domestic violence with new laws aimed at better protecting victims
- Selena Gomez's "Weird Uncles" Steve Martin and Martin Short React to Her Engagement
- Jon Scheyer apologizes to Duke basketball fans after ‘unacceptable’ loss to Pitt
Ranking
- Illinois governor calls for resignation of sheriff whose deputy fatally shot Black woman in her home
- Two opposition leaders in Senegal are excluded from the final list of presidential candidates
- Latest EPA assessment shows almost no improvement in river and stream nitrogen pollution
- Pakistani security forces kill 7 militants during a raid near the border with Afghanistan
- Tropical weather brings record rainfall. Experts share how to stay safe in floods.
- How to Watch the 2024 Oscar Nominations Announcement
- A caravan of migrants from Honduras headed north toward the US dissolves in Guatemala
- Andrew Cuomo sues New York attorney general for documents in sexual misconduct investigation
Recommendation
Intel's stock did something it hasn't done since 2022
Sarah Ferguson shares malignant melanoma diagnosis just months after breast cancer
Nikki Haley says Trump tried to buddy up with dictators while in office
Simone Biles Supports Husband Jonathan Owens After Packers Lose in Playoffs
The White House is cracking down on overdraft fees
Former players explain greatness Tara VanDerveer, college basketball's winningest coach
Democrats believe abortion will motivate voters in 2024. Will it be enough?
Piedad Cordoba, an outspoken leftist who straddled Colombia’s ideological divide, dies at age 68