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Germany updates: Merz addresses Bundestag on budget

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Skip next section Merz urges swift reforms amid economic slump

09/24/2025September 24, 2025

Merz urges swift reforms amid economic slump

Chancellor Friedrich Merz has called for deep reforms to counter Germany’s economic slowdown and global instability, telling the Bundestag on Wednesday that the country faces one of the most challenging periods in its modern history.

“The entire Western community of values is facing perhaps its greatest test,” the conservative Christian Democrat leader said during the debate on the 2026 federal budget, warning that Germany’s export-driven economy depends on an open, rules-based world order.

“Only a growth-oriented economy generates the resources we need to fund infrastructure, show solidarity and ensure lasting social security,” Merz said, adding that unions and employers alike are deeply worried about jobs and investment. “That is why we must act, and act quickly.”

Merz skipped the UN General Assembly in New York to attend the budget session, which follows last week’s debate on the 2025 spending plan.

https://p.dw.com/p/50zBa

Skip next section AfD attacks government over debt in budget debate

09/24/2025September 24, 2025

AfD attacks government over debt in budget debate

The co-chair of the far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD), Tino Chrupalla, has accused the German government of pursuing a “debt binge,” citing planned new borrowing of about €174 billion next year.

“You are recklessly wasting the capital of future generations,” Chrupalla said as he opened the Bundestag’s general debate on the chancellery’s budget, the first time he has led the opposition response in this session.

Chrupalla criticized high energy prices, the tax and levy burden, and spending on climate protection and the citizens’ benefit programs,as well as arguing that migration costs primarily strain the social welfare system.

His co-chair, Alice Weidel, led the opposition remarks during last week’s debate on the current-year budget. 

Expert: Germany’s Nazi past raises alarm over far-right AfD

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https://p.dw.com/p/50z6I

Skip next section Merz to speak at budget debate, not UN

09/24/2025September 24, 2025

Merz to speak at budget debate, not UN

While other world leaders address the United Nations General Assembly, German Chancellor Friedrich Merz is speaking as part of the Bundestag’s deliberations on Germany’s 2026 federal budget.

Leaders of the other parliamentary groups also plan to take the floor as part of the general debate, which is traditionally used for a broad confrontation over the federal government’s policies as a whole.

Later in the day, the individual budgets for the foreign, defense and development ministries are scheduled.

The budget debate began on Tuesday with the presentation of the draft by Federal Finance Minister Lars Klingbeil from the center-left Social Democrats.

Another general debate in the Bundestag took place only last week. The focus then was still on the 2025 federal budget, which had been delayed because of Germany’s February election.

The Green Party on Tuesday criticized Merz for staying in Germany as the General Assembly opens in New York, where about 150 world leaders are gathering this week.

Foreign Minister Johann Wadephul is representing Berlin as Merz instead focuses on the federal budget week and a key constitutional court election in the Bundestag.

Weidel mocks Merz as leading a ‘coalition of losers’

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https://p.dw.com/p/50z2Z

Skip next section Court to rule on accident pension for TV stunt performer

09/24/2025September 24, 2025

Court to rule on accident pension for TV stunt performer

Nearly 15 years after his on-air accident, Germany’s Federal Social Court is set to decide whether actor Samuel Koch qualifies for a statutory accident pension.

Koch, then 23, was paralyzed during the December 2010 live broadcast of “Wetten, dass..?” when he attempted to leap over five moving cars on spring stilts and struck the fourth vehicle, driven by his father.

The show’s format was the basis for the British show “You Bet!” and the American show “Wanna Bet?”

Now 37, Koch applied in 2020 for an accident pension, arguing he was volunteering for a public broadcaster. A lower court rejected the claim, finding that he organized the stunt himself for personal publicity rather than as part of a public-service role.

https://p.dw.com/p/50z60

Skip next section Welcome to our coverage

09/24/2025September 24, 2025

Welcome to our coverage

Guten Tag from the DW newsroom in Bonn.

You join us with German Chancellor Friedrich Merz skipping the UN spotlight to spar at home over Germany’s 2026 budget.

The chancellor is set to face off with party leaders in the Bundestag’s big general debate before lawmakers dive into the foreign, defense and development budgets.

The opposition Green Party has grumbled about Merz’s absence from the general assembly in New York, where Foreign Minister Johann Wadephul is representing Germany — returning to New York after flying to Berlin for the budget debate.

https://p.dw.com/p/50z5M

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Irish Times diarist’s new memoir gives the everyday grind ‘new lease of life’

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Irish Times journalist and author Frank McNally has given the ordinary, everyday grind “a new lease of life that nobody else can”, presidential candidate Heather Humphreys said at the launch of his new book on Wednesday.

Reading Mr McNally’s memoir, titled Not Making Hay, has been a “very welcome and calming distraction” from the campaign, said the Fine Gael candidate.

The memoir, she said, “moves effortlessly from the hilarious to some really very poignant moments”, some of which “really stopped me in my tracks”.

Launching the book, which explores themes that have featured in his column, An Irish Diary, over the past two decades or so, she pointed to various “wonderful stories” before remarking how it is “very clear that you can take the man out of Monaghan but you can’t take the Monaghan out of the man”.

Mr McNally’s memoir spans his upbringing in his native county before his move to Dublin in his late teens, after which he worked as a civil servant until his subsequent career in journalism.

“I didn’t think there’s many people who could find the parallel between their old car and the peace process but that’s what Frank does,” said Ms Humphreys.

Noting that the book’s title is a nod to On Raglan Road by Patrick Kavanagh, “a Monaghan man who left his mark on Dublin and across this country”, she said Mr McNally’s works in An Irish Diary also “have left their mark”.

Mr McNally told those present that the subject of his very first column was the Orange Order and the village of Drum, Co Monaghan, where Ms Humphreys is from.

“Even though I wrote it as kind of a humorous thing, I personally was proud that there was such a community in Monaghan, that this was part of our life, that we had these two traditions and that they were respected and the Orange marches were not an issue in Monaghan,” he said.

Skipping pages – Frank McNally on trawling through the discarded library of a lifetimeOpens in new window ]

Mr McNally said that if there is ever a united Ireland, “such respect for minorities is obviously going to be essential, and I think Monaghan is, as it was then, a microcosm of what the country at large will need to be”.

Patrick O’Donoghue, senior commissioning editor at Gill Books, told those present at Books Upstairs on D’Olier Street how he had been chasing Mr McNally for several years to write a “long overdue” memoir.

“For me, and I’m sure for many of you in the room, Frank has been hiding in plain sight as one of Ireland’s finest writers this century,” he said.

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Minister urges anyone involved in illegal burial of Daniel Aruebose to speak to Garda

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Minister for Justice Jim O’Callaghan has warned anyone involved in the illegal burial of the remains of Dublin boy Daniel Aruebose that they must come forward and speak to gardaí.

He added the manner the child was buried, in a field in Donabate, north Dublin, was a crime even if those who concealed the body were not involved in his death.

“You’re not allowed to bury the bodies of people, even if you had no involvement in the death of the person,” Mr O’Callaghan told reporters in Trim, Co Meath.

“You’re not allowed bury bodies in that manner and it’s a criminal offence to do so.”

The Minister said the Garda needed “to be given time” to investigate given that it was a “sensitive investigation”.

“But I’m confident in the investigation,” he said.

Gardaí “needed to be commended” for the search operation that found Daniel’s remains, saying it was “a very difficult task” in a large area.

‘A dark cloud over Donabate’: Dublin community holds vigil for Daniel ArueboseOpens in new window ]

He said the people who had information about what happened to Daniel, including how he died and why he was buried in the way he was, had “an obligation” to come forward to gardaí and share that information.

Daniel Aruebose case timeline: What we know so far, from early family life to present dayOpens in new window ]

Garda Commissioner Justin Kelly said there had been “16 days of really tough searching” in Donabate before Daniel’s skeletal remains were found last week.

The Garda investigation team was now “doing everything they can” to establish how Daniel died and why he was secretly buried, he said.

“The postmortem was concluded and those results are back and they’re with investigators; they’ll looking at those at the moment,” he said.

Daniel Aruebose death: Person of interest has no plans to return to IrelandOpens in new window ]

“We’ve obviously many other avenues that we have to go with, we have still a way to go before we would be able to speak publicly about some of the outcomes.”

Though gardaí have not released the results of the postmortem examination on the remains of Daniel – who is believed to have died aged about three in 2021 – it is understood no cause of death was established.

His remains, including bones, had decomposed in the moist earth to such an extent that it was not possible to determine the cause of death, though more scans and analysis were being carried out.

Gardaí have been told in interviews with people who knew Daniel that he died of natural causes and was discovered in his bed. They have claimed his body was buried in the field in Donabate in the panic after his death.

The secret burial concealed his death until last month when a check of a social welfare payment raised concerns for his safety and whereabouts.

Those initial concerns among staff at the Department of Social Protection were escalated to the Garda by Tusla, the child and family agency.

Some of the people who knew Daniel were interviewed. Information supplied during those interviews resulted in the field just outside Donabate village, on Portrane Road, being identified as the boy’s burial ground.

His skeletal remains were found in the field last Wednesday during the third week of the search.

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Crews attend ‘serious explosion’ at warehouse

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27 minutes ago

imageKaren Nolan

An industrial estate is being evacuated following a “serious” explosion.

Police, ambulance crews and firefighters were called to the Groundwell Industrial Estate on Crompton Road in Swindon at about 19:30 BST following an explosion in a warehouse.

Wiltshire Police described the incident as “serious” and said a large cordon is in place around the scene.

A force spokesperson said they are working to evacuate the immediate area, and that people living nearby should stay indoors and keep their windows closed for their own safety.

imageOrange smoke going up in night sky

Dorset and Wiltshire Fire and Rescue Service said it was dealing with a large warehouse fire and currently has 10 fire engines at the scene, along with other specialist vehicles.

Dozens of residents have written on social media that they felt their homes shake following the explosion.

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