Majority demands that Syrians no longer receive German passports | policy

Berlin – As many as 64 percent of Germans want the naturalization of Syrians to be stopped so that more of them can return to their homeland. There should be no exit bonus for this. This is demonstrated by the INSA flash survey conducted by BILD.

Only 16 percent opposed a ban on naturalization, eight percent didn’t care, twelve percent didn’t want to say anything. Astonishing: a majority of all voting groups agreed to this demand – at least Green vegetablesvoters (46 percent), most often are AfD (85 percent).

▶︎ Background: Sign in Syria Although the civil war has officially ended, much of the country remains politically unstable.

Also in Reconstruction of Syria The opinion is clear: 48 percent believe that Syria should be rebuilt primarily by Syrians themselves. 36 percent want Syrians and international supporters to share responsibility; six percent see this task as solely the responsibility of domestic helpers from abroad.

Who should rebuild Syria?

Voters from the EU (49 percent), BSW (59 percent) and AfD (69 percent) clearly support Syrians rebuilding their own country. Voters from the SPD, FDP, Green Party and Left were more likely to support a joint commitment (between 48 and 52 percent).

The decision on what to call is also clear Exit bonus of: 65 percent oppose paying money to rejected asylum seekers so they can return to their home countries more quickly. Only 20 percent support it, seven percent don’t care, eight percent are silent.

These kinds of bonuses have been repeatedly implemented by politicians, most recently to speed up refunds. However, this was rejected by most German citizens. Skepticism runs across all party lines – from 53 percent on the left to 79 percent on the AfD.

▶︎ What this means: The majority of Germans want clear borders rather than new incentives – no naturalization, no cash payments, but more personal responsibility and a willingness to return from Syrians.