German legislators voted to allow a significant increase in defense and infrastructure – a seismic transformation of the country that could reshape European defense.
The majority of the two -thirds of the Bundestag parliamentarians, who are required to change, agreed to vote on Tuesday.
The law will exempt the defense and security law from the strict debt rules in Germany, and creates a infrastructure fund of 500 billion euros (547 billion dollars; 420 billion pounds).
This vote is a traditional historical step for Germany, and it can be of great importance to Europe, as the full conquest of Russia for Ukraine is grinding, and after US President Donald Trump indicated an undiefing commitment to NATO defense and defense in Europe.
However, the representatives of the state government in the Senate, the Bounedrat, still need to agree to movements – by a two -thirds majority – before they became an official law. This vote was determined for Friday.
Friedrich Mirz, the man behind these plans and who is expected to be confirmed soon as a new consultant in Germany, told the lower home during a discussion on Tuesday that the country “felt a wrong feeling of safety” over the past decade.
“The decision we make today … it cannot be less than the first main step towards a new European defense community,” he said, adding that it includes countries “not members of the European Union.”
Under this measure, defensive spending will be exempt from the so -called debt brake in Germany – a law in the country’s constitution that strictly limits the federal government to only 0.35 % of GDP in Germany.
Mirz, who won the Sustainable Development Agreement ceremony in Germany’s general elections last month, suggested the measures quickly after winning.
In an interview on Sunday, he mentioned specifically fears that the United States can retreat from defending Europe and Trump talks with Russian President Vladimir Putin, saying that “the situation has worsened in recent weeks.”
“This is the reason why we should act quickly,” Mirz told the public broadcaster.
He chose to pay changes through the old parliament, knowing that the votes account was more convenient now after March 25, when the new parliament session begins.
Linke AFD extreme right-wing and Hand-Left, who were well performed in the February elections, opposes Mirz’s plans.
Mirz did not agree to the coalition agreement to judge Germany after his victory in the elections, and announced ambitious plans for the presence of a government in its place on Easter.
Coalition negotiations in Germany can last for several months at a time.
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