Thursday, November 20, 2008

SPD and CDU will take place in the dispute over BKA law no consensus


The deliberations of the Interior of the Federation and countries of the BKA's law have no rapprochement between the Union and the SPD brought. The Socialist Interior remained on Thursday in Potsdam in their demands for changes in three respects: They want a better judicial review of online search, an expanded right to refuse to testify and a clearer delineation of powers between the Federation and countries. Their union colleagues want to present the draft unchanged on the other hand goodbye.

Given the hardened fronts seems to reach an agreement before the vote in the Bundesrat, next week Friday excluded. The dispute over the BKA law is thus likely in the conciliation committee of the Bundestag and Bundesrat decided. "It is evident that a majority is difficult to achieve," said the chairman of the Interior Conference, the Brandenburg department chief Joerg Schönbohm, after deliberations.

It also tore through the SPD


The Bundestag had the BKA law in the past week with the voices of Union and the SPD against fierce resistance from the opposition adopted. Several of the SPD mitregierte countries subsequently submitted its veto one. Federal Interior Minister Wolfgang Schäuble reacted with incomprehension. "The talk is the opposite of what it two weeks ago still have said," the CDU politician.

The SPD Minister Schäuble threw in return that they are not sufficiently involved in the preparation of the law to have included. "I have the impression that he is ill-prepared, and that he now gets the acknowledgment," said Berlin's Interior Senator Erhart Körting. Expressed a similar view of Saxony-Anhalt Interior Minister Holger Hövelmann. It had long been demands for changes, said the SPD politician. "The colleague Schäuble but has completely ignored."

In the battle of the crack but also across the SPD. The Schleswig-Holstein's interior minister Lothar Hay attacked his party in the Bundestag to friends. "The SPD is not a monolithic block," he said. "I assume that you also learn in the Bundestag and perhaps even talk with each other times before approving a draft law, where it from the perspective of the countries ... significant constitutional concerns. "

The Hamburg Interior Senator Christopher Ahlhaus (CDU) called the debate irresponsible. "They have all the lessons from the 11th September withdrawn, "he said. Also, the Bavarian Interior Minister Joachim Herrmann (CSU) came to a quick agreement. "We need the BKA law urgently to combat international terrorism."

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