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Germany’s Left Party faces internal rift after Gysi links antisemitism to migrant members

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A growing row over Israel within Germany’s Left Party (Die Linke) has intensified after senior figure Gregor Gysi linked rising anti-Israel sentiment in the party to the presence of members with migrant backgrounds, triggering sharp internal backlash.

Gysi, who led the party’s parliamentary group in the Bundestag from 2005 to 2015, is facing mounting criticism from within his own ranks following remarks made in an interview focused on antisemitism.

The controversy stems from comments Gysi gave earlier this month on Focus magazine’s “Machtmenschen” podcast.

Asked how widespread anti-Israel and antisemitic tendencies are within the party, Gysi said:

“Well, the situation has become more dangerous because many more people with migrant backgrounds have joined us, including from certain specific backgrounds, which I actually welcome. But they bring incorrect views about Israel, and I will always oppose that; certain limits must not be crossed.”

In the same interview, Gysi added that he felt considerable relief after a party member who had described Hamas as a “liberation organisation” was recently expelled.

According to reporting by WELT, the remarks have drawn strong criticism.

The Federal Working Group of Migrant Left (BAG Migrantische Linke), formally recognised as an official party body in November 2025, is preparing to send a two-page letter addressed to the 78-year-old politician and to the party leadership under co-chairs Ines Schwerdtner and Jan van Aken.

The letter, signed by the group’s federal spokesperson council, including Baden-Württemberg’s lead candidate Mersedeh Ghazaei and around 180 other members, states:

“Some passages in your interview are highly problematic because they reproduce racist narratives and contradict the fundamental principles of our party. Associating members with migrant backgrounds with an alleged increase in antisemitism is unacceptable.”

The group argues that Gysi’s assertion that the situation has become “more dangerous” due to a rise in members with migrant backgrounds reflects a “racist threat scenario”.

“These kinds of statements reinforce anti-Muslim and anti-Arab sentiments and have no place in an anti-racist party,” the letter says.

The signatories also level more serious accusations against the veteran politician, arguing that his rhetoric contributes to “a further shift to the right in political and social discourse” and describing as “fundamentally antisemitic” what they characterise as his alleged conflation of Israel with Jewish people.

The Federal Working Group further accuses Gysi of fuelling internal divisions within the party.

“It creates the impression that the boundaries of what can be said are being set in an authoritarian manner by well-known and long-serving party officials,” the letter states, adding: “Your statements do not dismantle structural racism; rather, they intensify and entrench it both within the party and in the public sphere.”

The signatories are pressing Gysi to act. In an effort to “counter division”, they call on the senior Bundestag member to “immediately” delete the interview video from his Instagram account and to publicly clarify that members with migrant backgrounds should not be indiscriminately linked to antisemitism.

They also demand a public apology to migrant and younger party members “for the impact of your statements and the harm caused”, as well as immediate participation by Gysi and his team in anti-racism training.

The letter has been signed not only by BAG Migrantische Linke but also by several regional leaders, members of state executive committees and heads of local council groups. Gysi’s spokesperson told WELT that the letter had not yet been delivered and that he could not comment.

In his interview with Focus, Gysi had emphasised his strong support for “a sovereign and secure Israel” alongside “an equally sovereign and secure Palestine”.

Gysi’s father, Klaus Gysi, who was active in communist resistance against National Socialism and later became a politician in East Germany’s Socialist Unity Party (SED), was Jewish.

In November 2025, Gysi, together with former parliamentary group leader Dietmar Bartsch, Bundestag Vice President Bodo Ramelow and 14 other Left Party MPs, sent a separate letter to co-chairs Schwerdtner and van Aken.

That letter, referring to an anti-Israel resolution adopted by the party’s youth wing, stated: “It appears that something has gone wrong in our party.”

It called on party leadership bodies to “draw clear and unmistakable boundaries”.

Debate over what critics describe as “left-wing antisemitism” has long been contentious within the party. In February, the Thuringia state disciplinary committee removed Martha Chiara Wüthrich, a national spokesperson for the party’s youth wing, from all party positions and suspended her membership for two years after she described Israel’s war in Gaza as a “damn Holocaust”.

On Sunday, Brandenburg’s antisemitism commissioner Andreas Büttner resigned from the party after the Lower Saxony state branch adopted a resolution rejecting “Zionism in its current form”.

Europe

EIB to unveil 15 billion euro tech initiative to scale European startups

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The European Investment Bank (EIB) will announce a €15 billion initiative today, in collaboration with EU capitals and private investors, aimed at supporting the growth of European technology companies.

For decades, startups on the continent have struggled to raise the large-scale funding rounds necessary to scale on this side of the Atlantic, frequently turning to US investors or relocating abroad as they expand.

“We are catching up. Now we need to accelerate,” EIB President Nadia Calviño said.

Under the existing European Tech Champions Initiative, the EIB had already pooled resources with six EU governments to establish funds that invest in high-growth companies across the EU.

Calviño described the initiative as “very successful,” noting that it has supported 12 European “unicorn” companies valued at over $1 billion, including the German artificial intelligence translation firm DeepL.

The bank is now expanding the program with a new phase nearly four times the size of the original.

Twenty-five EU governments, alongside private investors such as Santander and Danske Bank, are expected to participate in the program.

This initial €15 billion aims to mobilize up to €80 billion in total investment. Calviño stated that this estimate is based on the multiplier effects achieved under previous programs.

As part of these efforts, the EIB also aims to attract European pension funds, which manage immense pools of capital but have historically allocated fewer resources to technology investments compared to their US counterparts.

In addition to the new funding, Calviño noted that the EIB will create a platform providing a single point of access for existing European scale-up initiatives, including the European Commission’s Scaleup Europe Fund, France’s Tibi initiative, and Germany’s Win initiative.

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Germany to purchase US Tomahawk missiles to build own long-range strike capability

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Germany will purchase Tomahawk cruise missiles from the United States and deploy them on German territory, Chancellor Friedrich Merz announced on Thursday.

The move marks a shift away from planned US deployments and toward Germany establishing its own long-range strike capability.

Merz told lawmakers that he finalized the agreement with the US government during the NATO summit in Ankara, adding that the talks held on Tuesday and Wednesday had exceeded his expectations.

“While we close a critical strategic gap in our defense, we are also working to develop our own European systems and deploy them in Europe,” the Chancellor said.

According to German government sources, Washington committed in a letter of intent signed on Tuesday to approve Germany’s acquisition of Tomahawk missiles and their land-based Typhon launchers in August.

The number of missiles and launchers Germany plans to purchase was not disclosed because the information is classified.

The planned acquisition appears aligned with US President Donald Trump’s pressure on European allies to cover their own security costs, such as by purchasing US weapons.

The fate of the Tomahawk procurement had become uncertain after Trump announced in May that he would reduce the US military presence in Germany.

That development was seen as a cancellation of a plan made under the previous administration to deploy a US battalion equipped with long-range Tomahawk missiles to Germany.

That original plan was designed as a temporary solution to serve as a strong deterrent against Russia while Europeans developed their own versions of such weapons.

Germany produces its own cruise missile, the Taurus, but its range of approximately 311 miles is three to five times shorter than that of the Tomahawk missiles.

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Apple loses EU court appeal over Digital Markets Act gatekeeper designation

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The General Court of the European Union has rejected Apple’s challenges against its “gatekeeper” status designated under the Digital Markets Act (DMA).

With this ruling, the company’s designated status for the App Store and iOS remains valid, while its applications regarding iMessage were also rejected.

Apple had argued that the five separate App Stores it operates for the iPhone, iPad, Apple Watch, Mac, and Apple TV should be evaluated as distinct, individual services.

The court rejected this argument, ruling that these stores serve a common purpose of connecting developers and users, regardless of the specific device.

The court also dismissed Apple’s defense that the DMA’s interoperability obligations violate its fundamental rights.

However, it did not conduct a substantive assessment on the legality of this obligation, stating that a direct legal link could not be established between the regulation in question and the determination of “gatekeeper” status.

Following the ruling, Apple argued that the obligations under the DMA “exceed the boundaries of legality and proportionality.” The company asserted that the new rules jeopardize the work it has carried out for years to ensure user privacy and security.

Apple retains the right to appeal the decision, though a company spokesperson did not comment on whether there are plans to do so.

Apple previously declared that DMA rules prevented the launch of the updated version of Siri in Europe, resulting in European users being unable to benefit from the service.

In force in the European Union since 2024, the DMA covers a total of 22 services and products belonging to Alphabet, Amazon, Apple, ByteDance, Meta Platforms, and Microsoft.

The regulation obliges these companies to share certain data with competitors, provide access to user-generated data, and offer verification tools to advertising partners.

Additionally, it prohibits platforms from engaging in anti-competitive practices that favor their own products. Companies failing to comply with the rules face fines of up to 10% of their global turnover, which can rise to 20% in cases of repeated violations.

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