NEWS FROM BERLIN
The citizen’s income and how Berliners had their benefits cut in July
Last July, job centers in Germany cut benefits for a total of 33,752 Bürgergeld (citizen’s income) recipients. According to the newspaper B.Z., one in nine of those (3,847) came from the German capital. In Berlin, the average cut was 62 euros per month. This marks a trend of yearly cuts to peoples benefits: in 2023, there was an average of 51 euros being cut; in 2024, 58 euros. Most recently, the head of the job center in Spandau, Winfried Leitke, commented that citizen’s income recipients would face tougher sanctions in future if those beneficiaries failed to attend appointments. Source: Berliner Zeitung
Tegel: how Berlin’s largest refugee shelter is set to become what it never was
Tegel has become known as “Germany’s worst and most expensive refugee shelter”. However, since the beginning of 2025, the number of asylum seekers has also fallen by almost 40%. Besides, Berlin has managed to create sufficient accommodation in other areas of the city. What is expected for the former airport now is to become a place for registration and distribution of all people arriving in Berlin. Stays ars expected to last between 72 and 96 hours. This is exactly as it was initially planned in spring 2022 – until everything changed. Source: rbb
Bonde announces crisis talks on the S-Bahn
Due to the ongoing problems with Berlin’s S-Bahn, Transport Senator Ute Bonde (CDU) has announced crisis talks. She has invited representatives of the S-Bahn and Deutsche Bahn to talk about the issue . She wants to find solutions quickly “so that Berliners are no longer burdened by the cancellations.” In recent days, numerous trains have been canceled on Berlin’s S-Bahn due to technical problems. The passenger association Pro Bahn says that outdated technology is the reason for the recent cancellations. Over the past decades, the railway company has cut costs wherever possible, both in terms of personnel and technology, criticized state chairman Martin Pogatzki. Source: rbb
NEWS FROM GERMANY
War on anti-war
A protest camp, planned for the “Cologne Parade Against War” on August 30, has been banned by the police. One of the reasons given for the move is the slogan “War on War” – popularized, among other things, by Kurt Tucholsky’s pacifist poem of the same name. The police interpreted it as a declaration of intent to counter armament with “warlike means.” Despite the police order, “Disarm Rheinmetall” is determined to legally enforce the camp, which is to take place from August 26 to 31 in Cologne’s green belt. Furthermore, the Left Party is appealing to the city of Cologne and the police chief to allow the camp to go ahead. Source: jungewelt
Many hurdles for women with unwanted pregnancies
A new study, the first of its kind, examines comprehensively the circumstances and care of women with unwanted pregnancies. For the study, 4,589 women with at least one child under the age of six were surveyed. With partial results available since April 2024, only now has it been published on the Federal Ministry of Health´s website. The findings are clear: the stigmatization of abortion has a negative impact on both access to care and the mental well-being of women with unwanted pregnancies. The study states that women almost always make the right decision for themselves: around 92% of those who decide to have an abortion have “no doubt” about that decision. Source: taz
A specter haunting the Administrative Court
It sounded like a victory: on last April 8, the “Marxist Evening School Forum for Politics and Culture” (Masch) won its case against the State Office for the Protection of the Constitution before the Hamburg Administrative Court. The court ruled that the authority may no longer classify Masch as left-wing extremist. Now, it seems, this legal victory could backfire. This is because of what the court stated in its written judgment of July 10. It confirms the ruling in favor of Masch, but, on the other hand, the court discusses the question of whether engaging with Marxist theory is fundamentally compatible with the constitution of Germany. Source: taz
Germany’s government argues over military service
Chancellor Friedrich Merz (CDU) wants to make the Bundeswehr the strongest conventional army in Europe, and this requires better equipment and more than the current 183,000 soldiers. Additionally, according to NATO ambitions, the Bundeswehr should be increased by 60,000 soldiers. For achieving this goal, Minister of Defense Boris Pistorius (SPD) believes the solution lies in reforming voluntary military service, but not everyone in the coalition partner CDU and CSU shares this view. Nevertheless, although military service itself remains voluntary, the law also provides for mandatory elements such as the questionnaire to be answered by all 18-year-old men from 2026 on, about willingness to serve in the Bundeswehr. Source: dw