Replacement of Hartz IV: Bundestag votes for citizens' income law - Union threatens to blockade in the Bundesrat

The Bundestag has launched the citizens' allowance planned by the traffic light coalition.

Replacement of Hartz IV: Bundestag votes for citizens' income law - Union threatens to blockade in the Bundesrat

The Bundestag has launched the citizens' allowance planned by the traffic light coalition. SPD, Greens and FDP voted in favor of the law with their majority. In a roll-call vote, 385 MPs voted in favor of the bill, 261 against, and there were 33 abstentions. Federal Minister of Labor Hubertus Heil (SPD) had previously clearly defended the project against criticism - while numerous politicians in the opposition expressed their displeasure with the social reform.

The Union, on whose approval the traffic light is later dependent in the Bundesrat for the final adoption of citizen income, has repeatedly and sharply criticized the planned departure from the previous Hartz IV system in recent weeks - and is still threatening a blockade in the regional chamber. In all probability, the Federal Council wants to deal with citizen income in a special session next Monday.

It is the "biggest welfare state reform in 20 years," said Labor Minister Heil. The reform should enable people to find a job perspective again after a long period of unemployment. Something is wrong in the system if people are only repeatedly placed in auxiliary activities instead of finding permanent work, explained Heil.

The Labor Minister harshly criticized the Union's position. It was a "logical break" that the CDU and CSU now only wanted to agree to an increase in the standard rates instead of supporting the entire reform, said Heil. He campaigned again for approval in the Federal Council. Heil, as he had done several times before, rejected the accusation that working with the new system would no longer be worthwhile in the future. "Work must be worthwhile," he emphasized.

Several members of the Greens and FDP also expressed anger at the attitude of the Union faction. The parliamentary manager of the FDP parliamentary group, Johannes Vogel, called it "schizophrenic and dishonest" that the Union was claiming that people with basic income would have more money in the future than low earners.

From the point of view of the CDU and CSU, however, the citizen's income reduces the motivation to accept a job. The deputy chairman of the Union faction, Hermann Gröhe (CDU), accused the traffic light coalition of refusing any debate about the "weaving errors" of the law. "With this arrogance you will not advance the welfare state, with this arrogance you will fail!" said Gröhe.

AfD and Linke also voiced criticism of the legislative plans - albeit for very different reasons. The deputy head of the AfD parliamentary group, Norbert Kleinwächter, said that in the future the basic income would mainly help people who were not willing to work. Left parliamentary group leader Dietmar Bartsch, on the other hand, made it clear that the reform plans were not enough to ensure a real departure from Hartz IV. The standard rates would be increased too late and are overall too low, said Bartsch.

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