Germans do not just reject illegal immigration, they would suppress all forms of immigration.

According to a new poll, the German population is overwhelmingly dissatisfied with the migration policy of the left-liberal federal government, and the vast majority of Germans are clearly against mass immigration.

According to a survey by the polling company Insa, 74 percent of those surveyed believe that the Social Democratic-Green-Liberal German government does not take sufficient measures against immigration, while only 17 percent of voters are satisfied with the work of Chancellor Olaf Scholz and his team, reports the German daily Bild based on V4na.com.

In addition, according to 72 percent of the respondents, it is correct that asylum procedures are conducted outside the external borders of the EU, while only 16 percent believe that the measure is incorrect - currently only Hungary in the EU is firmly in favor of this.

The survey also reveals that

Germans not only reject illegal immigration, they would suppress all forms of immigration.

According to the survey, 69 percent of the respondents would prefer less immigration to Germany, and only 11 percent would like more. Another 14 percent are not interested in the topic, and 6 percent refused to answer, reports Remix News .

The results show that

the gap between what Germans want and what they get from the government is incredibly wide.

The tripartite coalition that governs the country has built a program that expands benefits for migrants, grants fast-track citizenship to millions of new arrivals, loosens immigration rules and plans to increase immigration from a range of non-EU countries.

The federal government is also responsible for the explosive increase in crimes committed by foreigners: in 2023, 41 percent of crimes were committed by migrants, and 6 out of 10 of these were violent crimes. It should also be noted that migrants €48.8 billion in 2023 – almost as much as the entire German army, known as the Bundeswehr.

Cover image: A Syrian refugee named Darek, who has been granted asylum in Germany, attends a German language course at a language school in Hanover (MTI/EPA/Julian Stratenschulte)