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Showing posts sorted by relevance for query Sesselmann. Sort by date Show all posts
Showing posts sorted by relevance for query Sesselmann. Sort by date Show all posts

Monday, June 26, 2023

European Politics > Near Hysteria in western capitols and media after Wagner's brief revolt in Russia; Germany's AfD won its first district election as far-right party grows

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Wagner fears ‘wounded’ Putin, could launch purges like 

‘never seen before’: UK official

By Lee Brown, NYPost
June 26, 2023 8:08am  Updated

Russian President Vladimir Putin likely feels “mortally wounded” by the weekend’s military mutiny — risking purges “like we’ve never seen before” and even the possibility of a full-scale “collapsed Russia,” according to UK officials.

Alicia Kearns, the chairman of the UK’s foreign affairs select committee, told LBC Radio that the attempted coups by the powerful Wagner Group over the weekend created a “really dangerous inflection point.”

Wagner Group never really intended a coup, according to Prigozhen, he just wanted fair treatment from the Russian military for his troops.

“The risk of a collapsed Russia is not insignificant,” she warned of the country with the world’s largest nuclear arsenal.

“We don’t know how far Putin will go to keep power, but let’s consider it to be significant. If he’s successful, we will see purges, I think, like we have never seen before,” the senior politician said.

Only if you have forgotten about Stalin.

She also warned that “what could come next could be a lot worse.”

Putin was “mortally wounded” by the mutiny, a UK pol said.
AP

“There are no good options here and I think we really should be worried,” she said.

Although Wagner leader Yevgeny Prigozhin — a former top Putin ally — seemingly agreed to turn back from Moscow and accept amnesty in Belarus, Kearns warned that the upheaval “is definitely not over.”

“No one believes that Prigozhin is going to Belarus and live out his life quietly there,” Kearns told the Daily Mail.

“No one believes that Prigozhin is going to Belarus and live out his life quietly there,” Kearns said of the Wagner chief.
AP

“Putin … is mortally wounded but I don’t think anyone can say Putin is finished,” Kearns warned, saying that the revolt “has raised questions about the wholescale stability of the country.”

Doesn't 'mortally wounded' mean you are 'finished'?


Kearns said the UK government “knew for a few days that something was coming” — suggesting that other dark forces were involved in Russia given how Putin appeared to have been blindsided by the revolt.

“Did Russian intelligence not believe he [Prigozhin] was capable of marching on Moscow or did they lie to Putin because they were scared of him?” Kearns asked.

The UK knew for days that something was coming, raising the possibility that Putin’s military kept it from him.
AFP via Getty Images


Senior UK government sources also told the Times of London that the West “must prepare for a whole range of different scenarios.”

“From the very beginning of the invasion [of Ukraine], one of the most obvious scenarios was that the war could lead to political unrest back home in Russia,” one senior UK government source told the UK paper.

But this is not about 'political unrest', it is about 'military mistreatment', and, I believe, that's all it's about.

“We have to wait, watch and see what comes next,” another said. “This could be chapter one of something new.”

Kearns said she “would just urge caution” from those hoping to see the back of Putin, noting that history has taught that military coups typically end with “some sort of military, far-right extreme rule.”

That's the most intelligent thing she has said.

John Foreman, the former British defense attaché in Moscow, told the UK Times that Prigozhin toppling Putin would actually be the “worst-case scenario.”

“You’ve got to be careful what you wish for,” he said. “Prigozhin is not some sort of liberal, peace-loving democrat. He’s a fascist.”

A country that is weakened politically will often resort to increased military aggression in order to stabilize itself. The fall of Putin could mean the beginning of WWIII.





Germany’s far-right AfD party wins historic victory in local election


Germany's far-right AfD won its first district election Sunday, a further boost

to the anti-immigration party as it surges to record highs in opinion polls.


Issued on: 25/06/2023 - 21:44
2 min
Text by: NEWS WIRES

Robert Sesselmann of the far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD) party is pictured at an election event in Sonneberg,
eastern Germany on June 25, 2023. © Martin Schutt, AFP


Robert Sesselmann, a lawyer and regional lawmaker, came out on top in a closely watched runoff vote for district administrator in Sonneberg in the central state of Thuringia, near the border with Bavaria.

Sesselmann took 52.8 percent of the vote, according to the electoral office.

The victory came despite appeals from mainstream parties for voters to rally behind the incumbent candidate, Joergen Koepper from the conservative CDU.

With only around 57,000 people, Sonneberg is one of Germany's smaller districts, but the landmark victory makes it the first to be run by the Alternative for Germany (AfD) party.

"Robert Sesselmann has made history," tweeted AfD co-chief Alice Weidel.

The milestone comes as recent surveys put support for the AfD at a record 18 to 20 percent, neck-and-neck with Chancellor Olaf Scholz's Social Democrats and behind only the conservative CDU/CSU bloc.

The AfD is polling even better in the former communist East German states of Thuringia, Brandenburg and Saxony, which will see regional elections next year where the AfD is hoping to score major breakthroughs.

Germany's best-selling Bild newspaper called Sesselmann's win a political "earthquake" and "a remarkable success for the ultra-right party".

Thuringia's interior minister Georg Maier, from the Social Democrats, called the outcome "an alarm bell for all democratic forces", according to Bild.

More like an alarm clock trying to wake up the fools running the country.

The AfD's regional party leader in Thuringia is the far-right firebrand Bjoern Hoecke, whose past statements on Germany's Nazi past have caused outrage.

Hoecke, considered an extremist by German intelligence services, has called Berlin's Holocaust monument a "memorial of shame" and urged a "180-degree shift" in the country's culture of remembrance.

Created in 2013 as an anti-euro outfit before morphing into an anti-Islam, anti-immigration party, the AfD has benefited from growing discontent with Scholz's three-party coalition amid concerns about inflation and the affordability of the government's climate plans.

High immigration also remains a key voter concern.

The AfD stunned the political establishment when it took around 13 percent of votes in the 2017 general elections, catapulting its lawmakers into the German parliament.

It slid to around 10 percent in the 2021 federal election.

In Germany, where coalition governments are the norm, mainstream parties have always ruled out forming an alliance with the AfD.

(AFP)





Tuesday, July 4, 2023

European Politics > Germany's far-right AfD scores another first; EU Summit on migration fails - thank you Poland and Hungary

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German far-right AfD party wins mayor's office amid record-high polling


Germany’s far-right AfD notched up another first Sunday when its candidate was

elected a full-time town mayor, in a further boost for the anti-immigration party.


Issued on: 03/07/2023 - 08:36

AfD supporters pictured at a rally in Schwerin in northern Germany on August 10, 2021
© John Macdougall, AFP

Text by: NEWS WIRES

The Alternative for Germany (AfD) has surged to record highs in opinion polls, and the latest result comes just a week after they won their first district election.

Hannes Loth was elected mayor of the small town of Raguhn-Jessnitz, in the eastern state of Saxony-Anhalt, in a run-off against independent candidate Nils Naumann, according to results on the town’s Facebook page.

Loth, reportedly a 42-year-old farmer who was already a member of the local parliament, won 51.1 percent of the vote against 48.9 percent for Naumann in the town of about 9,000 inhabitants. 

It marks the first time the party has won an election race for a full-time mayor’s position, German media reported.

AfD members have held positions as voluntary, or part-time, mayors in smaller places. An AfD member was a full-time mayor of a town in southwest Germany from 2018 to 2020 but was not elected under the party’s banner – he joined the outfit during his term.

Loth thanked his supporters for the “wonderful result. I will be mayor for everyone in Raguhn-Jessnitz,” he wrote on social media.

In last week’s election, Robert Sesselmann, a lawyer and regional lawmaker, won a runoff for district administrator in Sonneberg in the central state of Thuringia, near the border with Bavaria.

Recent surveys have put support for the AfD at a record 18 to 20 percent, neck-and-neck with Chancellor Olaf Scholz’s Social Democrats and behind only the conservative CDU/CSU bloc.

Thomas Krueger, head of the federal agency for civic education, warned this weekend the party should not be dismissed as a “mere protest movement”.

“Voters want this party... the situation is serious,” he told the RND media group.




EU summit ends with a whimper as Poland and Hungary 

resist migration reform


by Jorge Liboreiro, Euronews, June 30, 2023:

Poland and Hungary made good on their promise to prevent the European Council from adopting joint conclusions on migration.

The two countries, which have long held hard-line views on the reception and relocation of asylum seekers, put their foot down after long and intense discussions among the 27 heads of state and government.



The blockage, which began on Thursday and continued all through Friday, forced leaders to delete the migration section from the summit’s conclusions, wiping out several paragraphs that had been widely anticipated.

Charles Michel, the president of the European Council, issued instead a separate statement on his behalf, recycling wording from the rejected draft.

“There wasn’t unanimity, but there was a great deal of convergence, which was not at all there just a few years ago,” Michel said in a press conference.

“We got 25 out of 27 countries.”

The Polish-Hungarian opposition stems from a major deal struck earlier this month in Luxembourg, where home affairs ministers agreed to move forward with a proposed reform of the EU’s migration policy.

The overhaul, which stills need to be negotiated with the European Parliament, is based on a new system of “mandatory solidarity” and offers member states three options to collectively deal with migration flows:

Accept a number of relocated asylum seekers.
Pay €20,000 for each rejected applicant….

Astonishing! Only two sensible countries in the whole EU.