Deutsch   English   Français   Español   Türkçe   Polski   Русский   Rumână   Українська   العربية
Home   About   Contact

Please support THE CITIZEN'S VOICE with a donation HERE!




What is satire allowed to do? Sven Schulze (CDU Minister-President) suddenly discovers during the election campaign that the ETS is killing industry – and talks his way out of his own responsibility


Sven Schulze (CDU) only realizes during the election campaign that the ETS is ruining industry – and pretends he himself is not part of the problem.



Oh, how touching. There stands Minister-President Sven Schulze (CDU) in front of the cameras in Lutherstadt Wittenberg, next to EU Agriculture Commissioner Christophe Hansen, pretending as if he has just received a divine revelation: Europe’s food production is “secured” here in Saxony-Anhalt. Sure.

And the high energy prices and the European emissions trading system ETS? They are suddenly putting a terrible strain on industry. “Framework conditions that harm our industry,” Schulze complains in the video clip. “We need solutions from Europe.” It was an “important meeting.” The “key issues” had been “taken to Brussels.”


What a groundbreaking realization. And right now of all times, shortly before the state election on September 6, 2026. As if the man hasn’t been Minister-President since January 2026, was previously Minister of Economic Affairs, and as if the CDU hasn’t been involved in Saxony-Anhalt for ages. Suddenly, in the middle of an election campaign tour, it occurs to him that emissions trading is bringing fertilizer giants like SKW Piesteritz—one of Europe’s largest producers—to their knees. Before that? Radio silence. Not a word. No outcry. Now it’s campaign chatter and a video that sounds like it came straight out of an EU propaganda toolkit.

A question for the Minister-President: What exactly came out of this “important meeting”? Minutes? A resolution? A concrete commitment from Brussels? Or just the usual—a nice photo with the commissioner, a few handshakes, and the vague promise that the “issues” would be “taken to Brussels”? That’s not politics, that’s PowerPoint theater. Schulze talks about “solutions from Europe” as if he himself weren’t part of the system that has been shaping these framework conditions for years.

After all, who actually decided on the ETS and is relentlessly pushing it through? The EU, of course. And Germany has always been at the forefront. The system has been running since 2005, reformed under German EU Council presidencies, driven forward by CDU-led federal governments (greetings from Merkel) and later accelerated with a green turbo. German industry is footing the bill while CO2 certificates become more expensive and energy prices explode. SKW Piesteritz produces fertilizer for half of Europe—and now Schulze acts as if all of this were some evil Brussels conspiracy he only learned about yesterday.

Why doesn’t Germany simply withdraw from this madness? Other countries don’t go along with it either to avoid ruining their economies. Poland blocks, Hungary resists, Eastern Europe bargains for exemptions—and Germany? We are the obedient model student suffocating ourselves. Deindustrialization? Welcome to Saxony-Anhalt. Chemical plants are closing, jobs are moving away, and supply security is becoming a lottery. But instead of putting up national resistance, Schulze makes a pilgrimage to Wittenberg and begs Brussels: “Please, please, do something!”

This is not statesmanship, this is sheer hypocrisy. A CDU politician who supported green-red EU climate policy for years suddenly discovers reality during the election campaign. As if industry hasn’t been sounding the alarm for years. As if high energy prices weren’t homegrown. Schulze seems to do nothing but talk—because concrete action would be a campaign killer. Instead: “Secure supply. Strengthen industry. Enable the future—in Saxony-Anhalt for Europe.” Sounds great. The only question is: when exactly is that supposed to happen? After the election? Or only once the last factory has shut down?

What is satire still allowed to do in this country, anyway? Apparently everything. Yet reality is more satirical than any cabaret artist: a Minister-President on the campaign trail pretending that the ETS is a sudden shock—and not the result of decades of German EU appeasement policy in which his own party played a major role. Bravo, Mr. Schulze. Keep it up. The voters are noticing. By September 6 at the latest.



Author: AI-Translation - АИИ  | 

Jeden Tag neue Angebote bis zu 70 Prozent reduziert

Other articles:

Death Came with the Lockdown and the Vaccination

In his lecture “Major Analysis: Europe’s Death Waves from 2020 to 2024,” Tom Lausen presented a ruthless data analysis that carries a clear message: The massive excess deaths... zum Artikel

No More Taxes for This State

In this interview, entrepreneur Steffen explains how he has reduced his company’s revenue to a minimum in order to avoid paying taxes — because he refuses to support this gover... zum Artikel

CDU Hot Air in the Spa Town! Political Babble: The Stolberg Declaration as a Symptom of Cowardice

The state governments of Thuringia and Saxony-Anhalt have presented the "Stolberg Declaration," a paper that claims to radiate economic strength – but in reality documents politi... zum Artikel

der offizielle Kanal der Bürgerstimme auf Telegram   der offizielle Kanal der Bürgerstimme auf YouTube   Bürgerstimme auf Facebook

Support the operation of this website with voluntary contributions:
via PayPal: https://www.paypal.me/evovi/12

or via bank transfer
IBAN: IE55SUMU99036510275719
BIC: SUMUIE22XXX
Account holder: Michael Thurm


Shorts / Reels / Kurz-Clips   Imprint / Disclaimer