FRAMING MIGRATION: POLITICAL PARTIES’ MIGRATION DISCOURSE IN ELECTION CAMPAIGNS SINCE THE MIGRATION CRISIS
Abstract
Since the 2015/2016 ‘refugee crisis’, which saw a sharp increase in the influx of
refugees, immigration has become one of the most contested topics in the public and political
debate in the European Union (EU). The crisis and the resulting increasing salience of the
migration issue have particularly fuelled the political discourse and led to the rise of far-right
parties in many member states. This master’s thesis aims to investigate how parties’ framing
on migration during election campaigns has developed since the crisis until most recently in
2025. Thereby, the questions of how the migration framing has changed and whether other
parties have converged towards the far-right’s anti-immigrant framing, and if so, to what extent,
are analysed. This is done by conducting a case study of Germany as a particularly crucial case
for the EU. The theory is based on an actor-driven logic, indicating that parties along the
political spectrum frame migration with the frames typical for their position along the left-right
party spectrum. However, this is expected to change in times of high salience of the issue and
under pressure from the far-right, leading to a convergence towards the far-right’s migration
framing. To analyse the political discourse, the manifestos of the six most important German
parties along the left-right party spectrum from the last three federal elections in 2017, 2021
and 2025 are examined. Thereby, frame analysis and a self-created codebook serve as the
method and analytical framework. The results show that especially centre-right parties
converge towards the far-right’s migration framing, while also centre-left parties slightly move
towards the far-right’s discourse. Furthermore, even left parties adopt frames similar to those
of the far-right, indicating the normalisation of the far-right’s position in the political discourse.
Degree
Master theses
Collections
View/ Open
Date
2025-07-01Author
Neisser, Bibiane
Keywords
immigration, migration crisis, framing, discourse, parties, party spectrum, far-right, European Union, Germany
Language
eng