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TODAY IN GERMANY

Today in Germany: A roundup of the latest news on Monday

Chancellor Olaf Scholz expects second term in 2025 federal election, Deutsche Bahn boss promises reliable train network by 2027 and more news from around Germany.

German Chancellor Olaf Scholz speaks and gestures during a 'Chancellor-talk' meeting with citizens in Berlin on September 4, 2024.
German Chancellor Olaf Scholz speaks and gestures during a 'Chancellor-talk' meeting with citizens in Berlin on September 4, 2024. (Photo by John MACDOUGALL / AFP)

Scholz expects second term despite weak poll numbers

Despite poor performance in a recent poll and the recent debacle in the eastern German elections which saw the Chancellor Olaf Scholz’ SPD party achieve its worst election results to date, Scholz is sticking to his plans to stand in the 2025 federal election.

He firmly expects “that the SPD and I will get such a strong mandate in 2025 that we will also lead the next government,” he told the Tagesspiegel.

“Governing is not getting any easier, so we should do it,” said the Chancellor. His goal is “an SPD-led federal government.” 

This comes as the SPD, Greens and FDP coalition continues to lose support, according to a new survey conducted by Insa for Bild am Sonntag.

The three-party coalition garnered combined support of 29 percent, two percentage points lower than the previous week, while the SPD on its own found favour with just 15 percent of respondents (a 1 percentage point drop from a week earlier).

An increasing number of people are also unhappy with the coalition’s performance in government: 74 percent said they were not satisified with its work – 4 percentage points more than the survey from two weeks earlier – and 70 percent are unhappy with Scholz himself’s performance (a drop of 6 percentage points).

And 77 percent of those polled thought Scholz was a weak leader.

READ ALSO: ‘Political earthquake’: What the far-right AfD state election win means for Germany

More commuter connections promised in Deutsche Bahn restructure programme

Ailing infrastructure, train cancellations and delays – travelling on Germany’s train network has become unreliable. 

But Transport Minister Volker Wissing said last week a major programme should turn things around.

Now Deutsche Bahn CEO Richard Lutz has put together a 110-page paper with details of the plan. 

According to German newspaper Süddeutsche Zeitung, which viewed the report, the paper is called S3 and will be discussed at the next supervisory board meeting on September 18th. 

In ‘S3’, Lutz explains how the railway is to become profitable and punctual again by 2027 – with values that he had already largely promised for 2024 five years ago, reports the SZ.

Lutz cites the broken infrastructure as the main reason for the missed targets.

According to the restructuring programme, Deutsche Bahn should make an operating profit of two billion euros in 2027. 

Lutz promises more commuter connections, wants to redesign the regional network and grow internationally. The railway boss also wants to shorten train turnaround times and keep fewer ICE trains in reserve.

READ ALSO: ‘Improve punctuality’: Can Germany sort out its crisis-hit train network?

Volkswagen boss: situation at VW is ‘serious’ but stands by Germany as a location

Volkswagen head Oliver Blume has defended planned cost-cutting measures at the core VW brand. However, the situation at VW is “so serious that you can’t just let everything continue as before,” Blume told Germany’s Bild am Sonntag.

“At VW, cost reductions are currently not enough. VW management is therefore “working on further measures,” he said, without specifying what these might be.

The management of the Volkswagen Group’s core VW brand announced a tougher cost-cutting course on Monday and no longer ruled out factories being closed or redundancies. 

The logo of German carmaker Volkswagen (VW) is pictured on the main plant of the group in Wolfsburg, northern Germany, on March 22, 2022. Photo by Yann Schreiber / AFP

The logo of German carmaker Volkswagen (VW) is pictured on the main plant of the group in Wolfsburg, northern Germany, on March 22, 2022. Photo by Yann Schreiber / AFP

Volkswagen, however, “stands firmly by Germany as a location,” said Blume. “Volkswagen has shaped entire generations. We have employees whose grandfathers worked at Volkswagen. I want their grandchildren to be able to work here too,” he said.

The carmaker has struggled amid diminished uptake for its electric vehicles and rising competition from cheap Asian competitors.

READ ALSO: Volkswagen mulls plant closures and job cuts in Germany

Action taken against 1,200 snack bars and restaurants violating regulations

During inspections at the around 6,000 restaurants and snack bars in the state of Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania, last year, authorities issued sanctions against 1,208 businesses which were violating regulations.

Eight were given criminal charges, 47 were fined and certain conditions were imposed on 1,153 to bring them in line with regulations, according to the state government’s response to a request by AfD state parliament member Martin Schmidt.

According to the information, around 70 food inspectors are employed by the municipalities in the northeastern state.

Schmidt had specifically asked about kebab shops, but the data collected does not indicate which of the shops inspected sell kebabs.

There is currently a dispute over what meat can be used in kebabs with the International Kebab Association (Udofed) applying to the European Union to include kebabs on the EU list of “guaranteed traditional specialties”. If the request was granted, kebab skewers would have to be produced according to uniform rules throughout the EU.

The restaurant industry and meat producers in Germany are opposing the initiative with the support of Germany’s government.

With reporting by Amy Brooke and DPA

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TODAY IN GERMANY

Today in Germany: A roundup of the latest news on Monday

German cities take protective measures against flooding as storm lashes central Europe, Interior Minister defends increased 'targeted border controls' and more news from around Germany on Monday.

Today in Germany: A roundup of the latest news on Monday

Protective measures erected in Dresden amid rising water levels

As Storm Boris wreaks havoc across parts of central and eastern Europe, water levels are slowly rising in Germany, newswire DPA reported.

Mobile protective walls are being put up in Dresden to protect the old town from rising floodwaters.

The State Flood Centre reported a water level on the River Elbe of 5.54 meters on Monday morning, triggering the second level of a four stage alarm. It  is expected to rise to 6 metres (alarm level 3) throughout the day. The Elbe’s normal level is 2 metres in Dresden and it was 9.40 metres during the 2002 flooding.

Meanwhile, the flooding situation in Bavaria remains tense, with more rain forecast.

Experts are keeping an eye on the water levels of the Danube near Passau, the Vils near Vilshofen and the Isar near Munich.

The German Weather Service (DWD) is expecting continuous rain from the Alps to the foothills until Tuesday. 

The situation is worse in neighbouring countries. Since Thursday, large swathes of Austria, the Czech Republic, Hungary, Romania and Slovakia have been hit by high winds and unusually heavy rainfall. Parts of Austria were declared a disaster zone on Sunday. 

IN PICTURES: How devastating floods turned Austria into a ‘disaster zone’

German minister defends border controls against criticism 

In view of considerable concerns in border regions about controls that will begin on Monday at further German border sections, Minister of the Interior Nancy Faeser (SPD) has promised flexibility.

In response to criticism from the affected regions and neighbouring countries she said in Berlin that the aim is “that people in the border regions, commuters, trade and business are affected as little as possible by the controls”.

“We want to continue to push back irregular migration, stop people smugglers, put a stop to criminals and identify and stop Islamists at an early stage,” Faeser said, justifying the controls, which now also affect the borders with the Benelux countries, Denmark and France. This would also make it possible to “effectively reject” people who wanted to enter the country illegally.

READ ALSO: How Germany’s increased border checks will affect travel from neighbouring countries

Faeser pointed out that there should be “targeted controls, not blanket controls”.

Stationary border controls have already been carried out at the land borders with Poland, the Czech Republic, Austria and Switzerland.

According to the minister, around 52,000 unauthorised entries have been detected and around 30,000 rejections have been made since controls were expanded in mid-October 2023, for example, if travel documents are absent or if they are invalid. 

Nancy Faeser

Interior Minister Nancy Faeser (SPD). Photo: picture alliance/dpa | Britta Pedersen

However, the German police have expressed concerns about whether they will even be able to cope with the increased controls in terms of staff capacity.

“The Federal Police will be busy gathering forces until Monday morning,” the chairman of the police union for the Federal Police, Andreas Roßkopf, told the Redaktionsnetzwerk Germany newsroom.

“We have to be careful not to become overloaded in the long term. Because the checks will last six months or even longer,” warned Roßkopf. “We already have a resignation rate of over 25 percent among younger colleagues,” he added.

Federal Police Commissioner, Uli Grötsch, also spoke of a “major challenge” for police officers on broadcaster Deutschlandfunk.

Berlin’s taz daily to ditch print for digital

The Berlin-based taz will be the first national daily newspaper in Germany to completely stop its print editions during the week from October 2025. As of October 2025, the newspaper will only be published as an e-paper Mondays to Fridays.

Only the weekly wochentaz paper will continue to have a print edition. Managing Director Aline Lüllmann and co-managing director Andreas Marggraf spoke on Saturday in Berlin of an “important step in the journalistic future of the taz“.

The last print edition of the weekday taz will be published on October 17th, 2025, the taz publishing cooperative announced at their general meeting on Saturday.

“This means that the biggest step in the process of the digital transformation of the taz has a date after six years of preparation,” a statement from the taz management read. The taz has been pursuing the strategic goal of “compensating for the decline in the traditional print subscription business and increasing reader reach in the process” since 2018.

The taz app will also be expanded and the newspaper’s website will be relaunched in mid-October 2024. 

“The taz is not in crisis. We are acting from a position of strength,” said editors-in-chief Barbara Junge and Ulrike Winkelmann. “We have long known that taz journalism works on all channels, digital as well as in print.” The technical upheavals could “even free up resources for even more journalism so that taz remains the most important left-wing, progressive voice in the German media landscape,” they explained.

The taz has been published as a national daily newspaper since 1979.

‘Balcony power plants’ on the rise in Germany

The number of so-called balcony power plants continues to boom in Germany.

In the second quarter of 2024 alone, around 152,000 of the small power systems were registered, news magazine Spiegel reported, citing information from the Federal Network Agency BNA.

In the whole of 2023, there were around 270,000 such systems.

According to an analysis by management consultancy Oliver Wyman, Bonn had the highest number of balcony power plants with 5.16 installed systems per 1,000 inhabitants, the magazine said. This was followed by Dresden with 4.10, Essen (3.37), Leipzig (2.94) and Mönchengladbach (2.78).

Munich came in at 1.38, just ahead of Berlin (1.36), Hamburg (1.31), Hanover (1.30), Frankfurt am Main (1.27) and Düsseldorf (0.97). In rural areas, balcony power plants were in demand almost three times more than in cities.

Balcony power plants are small solar power systems which cost relatively little and can usually be connected easily via a normal socket. They can be installed on balcony railings, but also in other places.

According to Spiegel, the average saving is around €215 per year or 17 percent of the electricity costs. 

With reporting by Amy Brooke

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