German parties in dispute over welfare for immigrants

Dispute rages as Europe’s labour markets open to Romanians and Bulgarians

A couple kiss goodbye next to a bus departing from the  central bus station in the Bulgarian capital Sofia this morning for  London via Austria, Germany and France. Photograph: Stoyan Nenov/Bulgaria
A couple kiss goodbye next to a bus departing from the central bus station in the Bulgarian capital Sofia this morning for London via Austria, Germany and France. Photograph: Stoyan Nenov/Bulgaria

Germany’s governing coalition is squabbling over calls to restrict welfare payments to European immigrants as Europe’s labour markets open to Romanians and Bulgarians.

The conservative Christian Social Union, one of three governing parties, is suggesting other European Union nationals should be ineligible for social security for their first three months in Germany and welfare cheats should be expelled to combat "poverty migration".

Labour-market restrictions across the EU for people from Romania and Bulgaria, two of its newest and poorest members, ended yesterday - fuelling fears, particularly in Britain, of an influx of unemployed migrants.

Centre-left foreign minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier told the Sueddeutsche Zeitung newspaper freedom of movement for workers is “an essential part of European integration.”

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Questioning that principle, he says, damages Germany and Europe.

AP