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Susanne Neumann, donna delle pulizie, straccia Herr Gabriel in pubblico.

Giuseppe Sandro Mela.

2016-05-13.

 

German Chancellor Merkel talks with Economy Minister Gabriel during the weekly cabinet meeting at the Chancellery in Berlin
German Chancellor Angela Merkel (R) talks with Economy Minister Sigmar Gabriel during the weekly cabinet meeting at the Chancellery in Berlin, Germany, April 13, 2016. REUTERS/Hannibal Hanschke

Siamo stati profetici.

Austria. Feymann. Le coliche tedesche.

Cancelliere austriaco Feymann dimissionario. Fuori uno…

EU. È l’inizio della fine.

Germania. Proiezioni Federali. Un terremoto.

Germania. Conventio ad excludendum AfD. Heimat.

Non stupiamoci se la gente inferocita lincia i politici.

Heiko Maas, Ministro tedesco scacciato dalla Folla inferocita.

Germania. Grandi Manovre per il dopo-elezioni 2017.

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«Austria’s Social Democratic (SPÖ) chancellor Werner Faymann became the latest victim on Monday»

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«His German counterpart Sigmar Gabriel insisted he wouldn’t be next»

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«Though he leads a party in freefall, with just 20 per cent support»

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«The same question is haunting centre-left parties around Europe as they grapple with a decline in traditional, class-based voter affiliation and the disappearance of the classic working class milieu.»

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«Austria’s SPÖ has looked on helplessly as the populist Freedom Party (FPÖ) now pitches itself as the new party of the working man.»

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«Observers of Austrian politics say the SPÖ and conservatives are tone-deaf to frustrations over economic stagnation and social cohesion fears in a time of inward migration and terror threats. SPÖ voters are particularly tempted by the anti-elitist stance on the FPÖ opposition»

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In un dibattito televisivo Herr Gabriel, il boss indiscusso della Spd tedesca, si è trovato di fronte Mrs. Susanne Neumann, donna delle pulizie, che ha parlato come parla la gente comune e lo ha ridotto ad una marionetta balbettante.

«Onstage with Gabriel on Monday, cleaning lady Susanne Neumann described the legacy of the SPD’s decade-old labour and welfare reforms: “shitty contracts” that condemned workers to low-pay, casual work with few benefits»

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«Why should I vote for a party that did that to me and gives me no answers?»

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«Why indeed. A poll for the SPD showed just a third of Germans believe the party can deliver on its historical core competence: social justice»

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«Under growing pressure to do a Corbyn, the centrist Gabriel admitted: “For social democracy, losing trust in social justice questions is existential.”»

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Adesso, alla fine, i nodi arrivano al pettine.

Sicuramente il problema dei migranti è stato il trigger, l’innesco della bomba su sui sedeva da tempo la socialdemocrazia tedesca. La bomba della sua intrinseca mancanza di giustizia.

«We must get out of the grand coalition after the next parliamentary election – that is clear»

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«For every migrant who arrives in the country, the Social Democrats lose voters»

Ma questo non è che la scintilla che ha acceso il fuoco.

Il vero problema si chiama «social justice».

La socialdemocrazia tedesca, come peraltro tutte le formazioni socialiste europee, si è atteggiata ad “illuminato” che deve e vuole guidare il popolo ignorandone la volontà esplicita.

L’Spd ha agito come se il popolo non esistesse o, se mai fosse esistito, non contasse nulla al punto tale da non chiederli nemmeno il parere. La socialdemocrazia ha calpestato l’Heitmat, ha combattuto la tradizione religiosa, storica, culturale e sociale della Germania.

«Susanne Neumann accused Gabriel – who is vice-chancellor and economy minister – of ignoring the problems of ordinary Germans struggling to find secure work and earn a decent wage».

Già: la realtà è questa.

Altro che popolazione di pervertiti gaudenti e felici.

Altro che popolazione che accetta serenamente l’estinzione per blocco delle nascite.

Altro che popolazione disposta a fare la fame pur di accogliere migranti illegali, trattati come nababbi.

Il 40% degli occupati tedeschi lavora con un Miniarbeit, ossia un rapporto di lavoro precario, remunerato tra i 450 ed i 700 euro al mese.

Senza avvenire e senza speranza.

Ecco perché il socialismo sta morendo e, possiamo dirlo serenamente, finalmente.

Ci sono arrivate anche le donne delle pulizie.

Non perché donne né perché tale lavoro non sia degno: non hanno però la preparazione di cui si vantano avere politici ed economisti d’assalto. Quindi, non essendo ancora corrotte, possono permettersi il lusso di essere logiche.

La gente comune non ne può di più di questa gente perversa e pervertita.

Aspettiamoci quindi una vera e propria rivoluzione.

 

Reuters. 2016-05-12. German SPD leader faces revolt from left keen to end Merkel coalition

A no-nonsense cleaning lady who humiliated the leader of Germany’s Social Democrats (SPD) on camera by accusing him of selling out to Chancellor Angela Merkel’s conservatives has galvanized a party rank-and-file desperate for a leftward shift.

Sigmar Gabriel, dogged by ill health and forced to quash rumors he will quit, is under unprecedented pressure but moving left would ratchet up tensions within Germany’s ruling coalition where the SPD is junior partner to Merkel’s conservatives.

With the conservatives also split on how to respond to a surge in support for right-wing populists, several major policies – ranging from a U.S.-EU trade deal to energy laws and steps to deal with the influx of more than one million migrants over the past year – are at stake.

At a party event this week, union official Susanne Neumann accused Gabriel – who is vice-chancellor and economy minister – of ignoring the problems of ordinary Germans struggling to find secure work and earn a decent wage. She made short shrift of his case that it was the fault of Merkel’s conservatives.

“So why do you stay with the conservatives?” asked Neumann to loud cheers and applause from the audience.

Gabriel’s argument that he can achieve more in government than in opposition has fallen on deaf ears as his party languishes at historic lows around 20 percent and the right-wing Alternative for Germany (AfD) gains from the migrant crisis.

This week’s shock resignation by Austrian Social Democrat Chancellor Werner Faymann due to splits in his party and the impact of the migrant crisis has also shaken the Germany’s SPD.

“What is tearing apart Austria’s Social Democrats also threatens the SPD. For every migrant who arrives in the country, the Social Democrats lose voters,” wrote Die Welt daily.

‘NO MORE MERKEL’

Neumann’s solution, to ditch the grand coalition, has drawn support. It spurred Matthias Miersch, head of leftist lawmakers in the SPD, to warn in Bild daily that the Austrian experience showed the results of a ‘grand coalition’ becoming the norm.

“We must get out of the grand coalition after the next parliamentary election – that is clear,” Miersch told Bild.

There is no sign that Gabriel will walk out of government and experts say he would be foolish to rule out coalition options. Instead, he seems to be stepping up the rhetoric to keep the left on side.

In the last week alone, Gabriel has played to his party base by raising doubts about a U.S.-EU trade deal and by striking a different tone from conservative Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble on Greek debt relief.

Other policies which could be hit by coalition strife are an integration law which still has to go to cabinet and plans to cut CO2 emissions and possibly exit coal. Ties with Turkey, a key partner in the migrant crisis, are also a flashpoint.

There are also questions about whether Gabriel, 56, is the right man to lead his center-left party into next year’s federal election against Merkel, who remains popular despite waning support for her conservative bloc.

Though a rousing speaker, Gabriel has a reputation for being unreliable and changing his mind. A bout of shingles which forced him to cancel a high-profile trip to Iran seemed to stoke speculation about his future at the weekend.

Although the speculation is damaging, jettisoning Gabriel now could backfire as it would smack of “last-minute panic”, said Oskar Niedermayer of Berlin’s Free University.

 

Abendzeitung. 2016-05-10. So bringt eine Putzfrau Gabriel in Bedrängnis

SPD-Chef Gabriel liefert sich bei der Wertekonferenz ein packendes Wortduell mit der Neu-Betriebsrätin Susanne Neumann. Sehen Sie nun in unserem Video, wie die langjährige Putzfrau die Herzen des Publikums erobert.

Berlin – Nach den Gerüchten um einen möglichen Rücktritt, die am Sonntag in Umlauf gingen, muss sich SPD-Chef Sigmar Gabriel nun erneut allerhand anhören. Diesmal von Susanne Neumann, langjährige Reinigungsfachkraft – “Putzfrau”, wie sie selbst sagt – und seit vier Wochen Mitglied in der SPD.

Dem Fernsehpublikum ist die charismatische Frau aus Gelsenkirchen durchaus bekannt, denn sie ist Mitte April in der ARD-Talkshow von Anne Will aufgetreten. Bereits damals lieferte sie sich ein mitreißendes Wortgefecht mit der Düsseldorfer Regierungschefin Hannelore Kraft. Diese war von der authentischen Putzfrau so begeistert, dass sie Neumann im Anschluss der Sendung überredete in die SPD einzutreten.

Nur wenige Wochen danach sitzt Neumann neben SPD-Parteichef Gabriel auf dem Podium und spricht mit ihm am Montagvormittag im Rahmen einer Wertekonferenz im Willy-Brandt-Haus über Gerechtigkeit – ein wichtiges Thema sowohl für die SPD, als auch für die Reinigungskraft Susanne Neumann, deren Ziel es ist “diese Agenda 2010 umzukehren”. Dabei beweist sie, dass sie selbst vor ihrem Parteivorsitzenden kein Blatt vor den Mund nimmt…

 

The Irish Times. 2016-05-10. Analysis: Social democrats in Europe face existential crisis

Austrian chancellor Werner Faymann latest victim as far right manipulates fears.

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Europe’s social democrats are facing an existential crisis amid the rise of fleet-footed populist parties, all pursuing hybrid social-national agendas.

Austria’s Social Democratic (SPÖ) chancellor Werner Faymann became the latest victim on Monday. His German counterpart Sigmar Gabriel insisted he wouldn’t be next. Though he leads a party in freefall, with just 20 per cent support, he was forced to insist that weekend rumours of his looming demise as leader were exaggerated.

Instead Gabriel, Social Democratic (SPD) leader and economics minister, hosted a “values” conference to discuss “new and old questions for social democracy”. But the biggest question went unanswered: what, in the year 2016, is the SPD for?

The same question is haunting centre-left parties around Europe as they grapple with a decline in traditional, class-based voter affiliation and the disappearance of the classic working class milieu.

As Jeremy Corbyn continues his campaign to reverse Blairite “Third Way” politics that, he says, catalysed Labour’s decline, Austria’s SPÖ has looked on helplessly as the populist Freedom Party (FPÖ) now pitches itself as the new party of the working man.

A dramatic defection of SPÖ voters to the FPÖ has made the populists Austria’s largest party. The same defection could see Austria elect Norbert Hofer as its first populist president in second-round elections on May 22nd.

Observers of Austrian politics say the SPÖ and conservatives are tone-deaf to frustrations over economic stagnation and social cohesion fears in a time of inward migration and terror threats. SPÖ voters are particularly tempted by the anti-elitist stance on the FPÖ opposition.

In Berlin, meanwhile, the SPD is wheezing through another grand coalition, squeezed by Angela Merkel’s centrist CDU, the hard Left Party and new populists of the Alternative für Deutschland (AfD). The SPD’s only growth area is voter frustration.

Onstage with Gabriel on Monday, cleaning lady Susanne Neumann described the legacy of the SPD’s decade-old labour and welfare reforms: “shitty contracts” that condemned workers to low-pay, casual work with few benefits.

“You ran us down,” she said. “Why should I vote for a party that did that to me and gives me no answers?”

Why indeed. A poll for the SPD showed just a third of Germans believe the party can deliver on its historical core competence: social justice. Under growing pressure to do a Corbyn, the centrist Gabriel admitted: “For social democracy, losing trust in social justice questions is existential.”

Back in Vienna, meanwhile, the populist FPÖ came out banging the drum for premature elections, knowing they could come out on top. Their options as junior coalition partner: the conservative People’s Party, reversing their ill-fated coalition of 2000, or Austria’s Social Democrats, a party one FPÖ spokesman remarked sadly, had “lost touch with the present”.

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