The waning of Angela Merkel’s political powers has been evident ever since her mishandling of the migrant crisis in 2015 caused a political back-fire that resounded across the European continent.

At home, the failure to control the arrival of nearly a million migrants in the space of a year splintered German domestic politics in a way that, until recently, many thought impossible, leaving Mrs Merkel at the helm of a listless, divided government.

Then the same mistake sapped her authority in Europe, as the anti-immigrant right in Poland, Hungary and Italy faced down her demands for a show of solidarity: migrant resettlement quotas that were imposed by a majority vote were flatly refused.

Superficially,…

To continue reading this article

Start a 30-day free trial for unlimited access to Premium articles

  • Unlimited access to Premium articles 
  • Subscriber-only events and experiences
  • Cancel any time

Free for 30 days

then only £2 per week

Try Premium

Save 25% with an annual subscription

Just £75 per year

 

Save now

Register for free and access one Premium article per week

Register

Only subscribers have unlimited access to Premium articles.Register for free to continue reading this article
RegisterOr unlock all Premium articles.
Free for 30 days, then just £1 per week
Start trial
Save 40% when you pay annually.
View all subscription options  |
Already have an account? Login

Login

Print subscriber? Click here