The next man of Germany can rely on support from the far -right alternative to the German party (AFD) for the second time a week, a widely condemned step.
Friedrich Mirz, the leader of the Conservative CDU, may need AFD to issue a legislation to strict immigration laws.
Former Chancellor Angela Merkel accused him of raising his back on a previous pledge not to work with AFD in Bundestag.
Mirz defended his actions as “necessary” and said he did not ask for AFD and nor wanted to support him.
“The right decision does not become a mistake just because the wrong people agree to it,” he said.
On Friday morning, CDU said it had requested a temporary stop before voting and appears to be talking about whether the legislation should be voted or sent to the committee.
CDU will lead in polls before the German elections next month. AFD is currently voting in second place, although Mirz has excluded any type of alliance with them.
Thousands of people moved to the streets of Germany on Thursday evening in opposing CDU's cooperation with the far right.
While the vote on Wednesday witnessed a non -binding proposal on the changes in the Immigration Law through Parliament, actual legislation will be presented on Friday aimed at reducing migration numbers and family reunification rights.
However, its proposed measures are unlikely to enter into this aspect of the sudden elections in February – if they do so – can collide with the European Union law.
The proposed legislation by the parties, including the current adviser, Olaf Schulz Social Democrats (SPD). Schools is among those who criticized Mirz's dependence on AFD, describing her as “an unforgivable mistake.”
“Since the founding of the Federal Republic of Germany more than 75 years ago, there has always been a clear consensus among all Democrats in our parliaments: we are not a common issue with the far right,” he said.
In its rare intervention in politics, Merkel said he was breaking a pledge It was done in November to work with the Social Democratic and Green Party to pass legislation, not AFD. She described the pledge as “an expression of the political responsibility of the great state.”
Meanwhile, Alice Widel, the leader of AFD, accused the main parties on Wednesday of not respecting German voters by refusing to work with her party.
AFD sections are classified as right -wing extremists by local intelligence.
On Wednesday, Germany's vote witnessed the discussion of immigration after a series of fatal attacks, where the suspect was asylum seeker, the last of which is In the city of Achushaneburg.
It has become an essential issue in the election campaigns, which resulted from the collapse of the Ruling School Coalition.