09/02/24View in Browser

Germany is quietly going progressive

By Nick Alipour | @realNickAlipour

Up to six people may soon enter an alternative to marriage in Germany, a ‘civil union of mutual legal responsibility’ – just one example of how the country’s coalition government has been quietly pushing the boundaries of social change.

David Cameron had little to be proud of by the end of his reign as British prime minister. With his legacy of austerity disgraced, and the label of Brexit-enabler firmly stuck to him, Cameron has often named Britain’s social liberalisation, in particular, the introduction of gay marriage, “one of my proudest achievements”.

The experience could soon be shared by German Chancellor Olaf Scholz and his ill-fated ‘traffic-light’ coalition.

Attempts to supercharge the country’s green transition and ailing economy appear mostly doomed, with every new initiative sparking infighting and ending up being watered down.

But in liberalising the country’s stuffy social policies, still covered in the moralistic dust of Angela Merkel’s Christian Democratic government, the ‘traffic light’ is quietly making progress.

Germany’s ban on providing information on abortion? Scrapped.

The strict immigration code and naturalisation requirements? Liberalised.

Self-identification for transgender people and the legalisation of marijuana? Set to be passed.

Odd name constructions like ‘Fräulein Müller-Obermann’ will also soon be confined to being the butt of Nazi jokes, as Germans are finally allowed to combine last names freely and unhyphenated, like most of their European peers.

The newest addition, which the justice ministry introduced this week, is ‘Verantwortungsgemeinschaften’ (roughly: companionships of shared responsibility).

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Photo of the day

Protesters set hay bales on fire during a protest by Polish farmers near the Polish-Ukrainian border crossing in Medyka, southeastern Poland, 09 February 2024. Polish farmers announced a nationwide protest on 09 February against the European Green Deal and the influx of goods coming from Ukraine, expected to last for 30 days.The protest was sparked by the recent decision by the European Commission to extend the duty-free trade with Ukraine until 2025. Farm vehicles, such as tractors, as well as pedestrians block roads in different parts of the country. EPA-EFE/DAREK DELMANOWICZ 

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The Roundup

last-minute deal in Berlin has paved the way for the approval of the EU’s 2040 target of reducing heavy-duty vehicle emissions by 90% in exchange for a clause dedicated to vehicles running on e-fuels.

The Russia-initiated United Nations Cybercrime Convention was due to conclude on Friday but lack of consensus on the scope and terminology has prompted civil society to call for the rejection of the Convention in its current form.

The German government is looking beyond Europe to supply hydrogen in coming years and has agreed on a task force with Algeria to facilitate the framework for imports.

The Council and the European Parliament agreed on Thursday on the proposal to phase out mercury in dental amalgam completely as part of the commitments from the EU’s Zero Pollution Ambition.

If you’re interested in EU defence funds and programmes, check out our detailed explainer.

Thousands of tractors took to the Polish streets in a huge nationwide demonstration on Friday as local farmers, inspired by their colleagues from other EU countries, resumed their protest against the European Green Deal and the imports from Ukraine.

Sustainability measures are necessary but “forcefully” imposed on farmers while other economic sectors – such as tourism – are left untouched, a representative of young farmers in Spain’s Catalonia told Euractiv, warning that the far-right wants to be the voice of neglected rural areas in Europe.

For more policy news, don’t miss this week’s Tech Brief, the Economy Brief, and the Agrifood Brief.

Look out for…

  • Commission Vice-President Maroš Šefčovič delivers closing keynote speech at European Conference at Harvard on Sunday.
  • Informal meeting of ministers for development Sunday-Monday

Views are the author’s

[Edited by Zoran Radosavljevic/Alice Taylor]

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