
There was no hiding from a townhall meeting.
Angela Merkel should be forced to ring in the new year in Cologne by the train station with the Muslim hordes she imported into her country.
‘I’M TRULY AFRAID’ HUMILIATED MERKEL IS CONFRONTED BY DAD TERRIFIED AT MIGRANT INFLUX
take our poll - story continues belowCompleting this poll grants you access to DC Clothesline updates free of charge. You may opt out at anytime. You also agree to this site's Privacy Policy and Terms of Use.ANGELA Merkel was left squirming after an enraged party member told her on a video link that her refugee policy had left him “afraid for the safety and future of my four children”.
By Allan Hall and Monika Pallenberg, The Express, Dec 3, 2016
Merkel is normally protected from the sharp end of public opinion by phalanxes of flunkies, security personnel and office aides.
But there was no hiding place when she agreed to a virtual town hall meeting which linked her in her Berlin office with conservative voters in Frankfurt.
The embarrassing clash Thursday evening came days before her Christian Democratic Union party congress in Essen.
It gave the opportunity for people like the disillusioned father to vent his despair at the refugee policy that has riven the country, caused neo-Nazi violence to increase and lured her supporters into the arms of right-wing anti-immigrant parties like the Alternative for Germany (AfD.)
The man, a professor from the Rheingau region of western Germany, said to her: “I’m a father of four children. I’d much rather be sitting in an armchair right now and enjoy the rest of the evening… The only reason I am here is that for the first time in my life I am truly afraid.
“Afraid for the future of my children, afraid for the stability of our society, afraid for the security. Afraid that we won’t be able to get a handle on what started in the autumn of 2015.”
The dad added: ”Why not finally agree that people don’t want your refugee policy, that people actually require a very different course of refugee policy?
“For the first time in my life I fear for the safety and the future of my children.”
The man, a professor from the Rheingau region of western Germany, said to her: “I’m a father of four children. I’d much rather be sitting in an armchair right now and enjoy the rest of the evening… The only reason I am here is that for the first time in my life I am truly afraid.“Afraid for the future of my children, afraid for the stability of our society, afraid for the security. Afraid that we won’t be able to get a handle on what started in the autumn of 2015.”The dad added: ”Why not finally agree that people don’t want your refugee policy, that people actually require a very different course of refugee policy?“For the first time in my life I fear for the safety and the future of my children.” For the first time in my life I fear for the safety and the future of my children
The professor, who it later emerged is a member of the think tank the Adenauer Foundation, has written a policy paper rejecting Mrs Merkel’s decision to let close to 1.5 million refugees into the country, many hundreds of whom intelligence chiefs now suspect may be Isis sleepers plotting carnage.Mrs Merkel, ever the consummate politician, at first appeared taken aback but then said that the dignity of the the refugees was “inviolable” and that Germany could not just leave them to drown in the Mediterranean.The Chancellor added: “I take seriously your fear and note your criticism. But I think that the consequences if we didn’t take the action that we did would have produced other worries.”
AFP
More than one million migrants have made their way to Germany since Merkel opened the borders
But again the lady is not for turning and she refuses to put a cap on refugee numbers, saying: “The dissent we have to live with.”When six of her party members from the CDU District Association of Reutlingen appeared on her screen voicing similar fears of feeling swamped and threatened by the new arrivals, the chancellor’s advice was; “Just go towards the refugees so that the fear will disappear.Mrs Merkel has seen her popularity plunge in the wake of the refugee crisis and she has been trounced by the AfD in several key regional elections this year, including in her own constituency.Her numbers have since gone back up but party stalwarts fear more arrivals, or a terror outrage of the kind suffered in Paris last year, could seriously jeopardise her chances of a fourth term in office when she stands in the general election in the autumn of 2017.