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Weimer: AfD Cultural Struggle & Public Broadcasting One-Sidedness

Culture Minister Criticizes Public Broadcasters as “Politically Inclined,” Warns Against Right-Wing ⁢Appropriation of National Symbols

BERLIN –germany’s ⁢Minister of Culture, Wolfram Weimer, has ⁢leveled ‍criticism at⁣ the country’s public service broadcasting‍ system, accusing it of political one-sidedness leaning to the ⁣left. He simultaneously condemned threats against journalists, citing the ‌recent case of ZDF presenter Dunja Hayali as evidence ​of a⁤ dangerously polarized public discourse.

“This is a sign of⁣ how hazardous the polarized, poisoned public discourse is now. He puts journalists in danger,” weimer stated, according to German news agency KNA. “Every​ reasonable politician in the⁣ political center ⁣must obtain attitude. And ‌we all agree that this is to be⁣ sentenced.”

Weimer emphasized the importance of financially securing public broadcasting through license fees, but ‌argued its⁤ current trajectory is alienating a important portion of the population. “The public service broadcasting‍ has an acceptance problem‌ because​ it has a politically inclined left. It is indeed not good ⁣if​ many ⁣millions of germans have‌ to pay forced contributions, but they feel that they will not‌ be represented ‌there. ‌That should⁣ change.”

Beyond the issue of public ​broadcasting, Weimer issued a stark ⁤warning about a “cultural struggle” being ‍waged by the far-right Choice for Germany (AfD) party. He urged the political center to actively defend national symbols and spaces from appropriation⁢ by right-wing extremists.

“The bourgeois center must comment, it must not reveal their rooms, their symbols, otherwise they occupy ​others,” Weimer cautioned, pointing to‌ recent marches by ⁣right-wing extremists at historically significant locations ⁢like Hambacher Castle – a​ site of early german democracy – and ​the Hermannsdenkmal monument. “Or ‌the Hermannsdenkmal. That doesn’t belong to​ the AfD. This is our Robin Hood ⁢and ​not its nationalist.”

Weimer also addressed ‌the AfD’s rising support in eastern Germany, stating he doesn’t believe 30% of East ⁣Germans‌ genuinely‌ sympathize with neo-nationalist ideologies.He framed the situation as ⁢a broader ‌societal challenge, arguing, ​”I find it unfair to⁣ tell the East ‍Germans, the​ AfD topic is your problem.⁤ The entire society has ⁣a ​problem here.” He stressed the ‌need to “hold up the torch of the Enlightenment” ​in the face of emerging authoritarianism, polarization, and⁤ social decay across the country.

The​ minister’s comments come amid growing concerns⁣ about the strength of democratic institutions and the rise of extremist ideologies in Germany, 35 years after reunification. His call for a robust defence of national‍ values and a more representative public broadcasting system reflects ⁤a broader effort⁢ to counter the AfD’s influence and safeguard Germany’s democratic foundations.

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