“The German chancellor candidate from the far-right party advocates the country’s exit from the EU December 19, 19:24 Share: Alice Weidel (Photo: wikipedia.org) The German chancellor candidate from the far-right Alternative for Germany party Alice Weidel advocates the country’s exit from the EU of the European Union. She accuses the EU of “destroying the German automobile industry.” This was reported by Bloomberg on Thursday, December 19. “What we need is free trade”, — write on: ua.news
Alice Weidel (Photo: wikipedia.org)
A candidate for German chancellor from the far-right Alternative for Germany party, Alice Weidel, advocates the country’s exit from the European Union. She accuses the EU of “destroying the German automobile industry.” This was reported by Bloomberg on Thursday, December 19.
“What we need is free trade between European countries, but we don’t need all this red tape. The EU’s socialist policy has destroyed the market mechanism in Europe,” Weidel said.
The chancellor candidate cited the German automobile sector as an example, which, in her opinion, was “robbed” by the European Union’s ban on the sale of new cars with an internal combustion engine until 2035.
“We don’t need all these bureaucrats who have no idea what they are doing and are destroying our foundations in the European Union. We do not see that the European Union in its current state is an institution that works well,” Weidel said.
As Bloomberg writes, the Alternative for Germany party is calling for Germany’s exit from the European Union and the Eurozone ahead of the special elections to be held on February 23. There, they also call for a fight against illegal migrants. In particular, there is talk of the deportation of hundreds of thousands of people.
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Germany’s ruling coalition collapsed after Chancellor Olaf Scholz fired Finance Minister Christian Lindner on November 6. He was followed by other ministers – his allies in the Free Democratic Party.
On November 12, Bloomberg reported that German lawmakers agreed to hold early elections in the country on February 23, 2025.
On December 16, the Bundestag voted to dissolve the German government headed by Chancellor Olaf Scholz.