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Sunday, 12 February 2017
ANTI TRUMP FRANK-WALTER STEINMEIER BECOMES GERMANY PRESIDENT
A German parliamentary assembly
has elected Frank-Walter
Steinmeier to become the country’s
next president by an overwhelming
majority
- Mr Steinmeier, Germany’s former
foreign minister, strongly
criticised Donald Trump during the
US election campaign
- He was elected with 931 of 1,260
votes
A German parliamentary assembly
has elected Frank-Walter Steinmeier
to become the country’s next
president by an overwhelming
majority.
American President, Donald Trump and
newsly elected President of Germany,
Frank Steinmeier
Independent reports that Mr
Steinmeier, Germany’s former
foreign minister, strongly criticised
Donald Trump during the US election
campaign.
READ ALSO: Trouble looms for
Donald Trump, as more than 650,000
people have joined a campaign to
Impeach the US President
When asked in August about the rise
of right-wing populism in Germany
and elsewhere, Mr Steinmeier
criticised those who “make politics
with fear”.
He cited the nationalist Alternative
for Germany party, the promoters of
Britain’s exit from the European
Union, and “the hate preachers, like
Donald Trump at the moment in the
United States”.
The daily Berliner Morgenpost billed
Mr Steinmeier as “the anti-Trump
president”.
He was elected with 931 of 1,260
votes. The German president has
little executive power but is
considered an important moral
authority.
Mr Steinmeier, a Social Democrat,
had the support of Chancellor Angela
Merkel’s “grand coalition” of centre-
right and centre-left parties.
He has long been one of Germany’s
most popular politicians.
Under Ms Merkel, he served twice as
foreign minister – from 2005 to 2009
and again from 2013 until this year,
with a stint as opposition leader in
between. He has also won respect for
his persistence in trying to resolve
the long-running crisis in Ukraine.
He will succeed Joachim Gauck, a 77-
year-old former pastor and East
German pro-democracy activist. He
did not seek a second five-year term
because of his age.
His election is likely to be one of the
last moments of coalition unity ahead
of a parliamentary election in
September in which Ms Merkel is
seeking a fourth term. Both sides
hope to end the “grand coalition”
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