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Climate change missing from German coalition negotiations, say Greens

Climate change missing from German coalition negotiations, say Greens

Yahoo31-03-2025

Climate change and environmental protection are being ignored in ongoing negotiations over the formation of the next German government, the Greens said on Monday.
The party's co-leader Felix Banaszak argued in Berlin that "climate, environment and nature conservation are obviously not part of this government, and climate and energy policies only seem to have a decorative function in these negotiations."
Following elections in February, the conservative CDU/CSU bloc - made up of Friedrich Merz's Christian Democrats and the Bavaria-only Christian Social Union (CSU) - is negotiating with the centre-left Social Democrats over the formation of a governing coalition.
Merz, the presumptive next chancellor, is hoping to have a government in place by the Easter holidays in April.
But the Greens are concerned that environmental policy is not a key focus for the incoming administration, with talks centring on migration, cuts to social spending and tax policy.
Ahead of another round of negotiations in the German capital on Monday, CSU leader Markus Söder said "major breakthroughs" must occur this week.
"Now comes the week of truth, I would say, in which we have to set the fundamental course," said Söder, the premier of the southern state of Bavaria. "As always in life, it's about the most important thing: the money. But we will find a solution."
The arduous coalition negotiations come at a critical time for Europe amid US President Donald Trump's return to the White House.
Banaszak said that Germany cannot afford to cut critical development programmes, as seen in the United States.
China, Russia and other authoritarian states are ready to step in to fill the vacuum, he argued.

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World leaders gather to discuss defence amid Israel-Iran tensions
World leaders gather to discuss defence amid Israel-Iran tensions

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World leaders gather to discuss defence amid Israel-Iran tensions

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No polls, no machines, just hands in the air—here's how one Swiss town votes
No polls, no machines, just hands in the air—here's how one Swiss town votes

National Geographic

time4 hours ago

  • National Geographic

No polls, no machines, just hands in the air—here's how one Swiss town votes

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In 2007, citizens of Glarus voted at the Landsgemeinde to lower the voting age from 18 to 16, making it the only canton in Switzerland that allows citizens to vote before the age of 18. ⁠In 2021, the cantonal parliament tightened the Energy Act, banning the installation of fossil-fuel heating systems in new buildings and making the canton's energy law one of the most progressive in Switzerland. But while it might be tempting to tie Glarus' unique voting style to progressive politics, it's perhaps not so simple: Appenzell Innerrhoden, the only other place where the Landsgemeinde is practiced, has a more conservative political bent. In 1991, a full 20 years after Switzerland granted women the federal right to vote, Appenzell Innerrhoden finally allowed women to vote in cantonal elections—and only after a federal court ruling forced the town to comply. (Glarus granted women cantonal voting rights in 1971, along with most of the rest of the country.) 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Woman with ties to cultlike group appears in court after border agent's killing
Woman with ties to cultlike group appears in court after border agent's killing

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Woman with ties to cultlike group appears in court after border agent's killing

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