Deutsche Welle (English edition)

Josep Maria Bartomeu: Police arrest ex-Barcelona president

The arrests of several former officials of the Spanish football club are related to last year's "Barcagate" scandal and come less than a week before presidenti­al elections.

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Police detained the former president of Spanish soccer giants FC Barcelona, Josep Maria Bartomeu, and other senior club officials on Monday.

The arrests were part of a police investigat­ion into the "Barcagate" controvers­y.

They followed a raid at Barcelona's offices and come just six days ahead of presidenti­al elections.

Which Barcelona were arrested? officials

Catalan police did not say who were taken into custody but presidenti­al candidate Joan Laporta confirmed reports that

Bartomeu was among those detained.

Spanish media outlets also named Barcelona's current chief

executive Oscar Grau, head of legal services Roman Gomez

Ponti and Bartomeu's advisor Jaume Masferrer.

Court officials said a judge ordered Monday's search and seize operation but that the arrests had been made at the discretion of the police officers involved.

The operation was carried out by the police's financial crimes department, according to local authoritie­s.

How has Barcelona reacted?

FC Barcelona said it offered "full collaborat­ion to the legal and police authoritie­s to help make clear facts which are subject to investigat­ion."

"The i n f o rma t i o n and documentat­ion requested by the judicial police force relate strictly to the facts relative to this case. FC Barcelona (expresses)

its utmost respect for the judicial process in place and for the principle of presumed innocence for the people affected within the remit of this investigat­ion," Barcelona said.

What is the 'Barcagate' scandal?

The club released a statement confirming the operation was tied to last year's "Barcagate" — when it was accused of covering up payments made to I3 Ventures.

Officials were accused of hiring the company to carry out a smear campaign against current and ex-players who were critical of the club, to enhance the image of then-President Bartomeu and other senior club officials on social media.

Barcelona had denied the accusation­s that it hired a company to make such comments.

The football club is currently more than €1.1 billion ($1.3 billion) in debt.

mvb/rt (AP, AFP, EFE)

Christian Democratic Union and Christian Social Union (CSU)

Color: Black

Chairpeopl­e: Armin Laschet (CDU), Markus Söder(CSU)

Parliament­ary leader: Ralph Brinkhaus (CDU)

Membership: 405,816

Voters: The CDU/CSU are popular with people over the age of 60, churchgoer­s, and those living in rural rather than urban areas. The CDU has also traditiona­lly done well among small business owners and people with lower or medium education levels.

2019 European election result: 28.9%

2017 Bundestag election result: 33% (246/709 seats)

History:The CDU was founded in West Germany in 1950 in the aftermath of World War II as a gathering pool for all of Germany's Christian conservati­ve voters. It became the most dominant political force in the postwar era, unifying Germany and leading the government for 47 of those 67 years, alongside its Bavaria sister-party, the Christian Social Union (CSU).

CDU Chancellor Konrad Adenauer, who governed from 1949 to 1963, is the closest the Federal Republic has to a founding father. It was Adenauer and his economy minister (and successor as chancellor), Ludwig Erhard, who presided over West Germany's "economic miracle." The party's reputation as Germany's rock of moral and economic stability continued under another long-term CDU chancellor, Helmut Kohl, who drove German reunificat­ion in 1990 — a key historic moment important in understand­ing today's politics.

Platform: Angela Merkel was party leader from 2000 to 2018 and has been chancellor since 2005. She stood for both a continuati­on and a break from the CDU's traditiona­l values. German voters trusted her to steward the economy safely. She maintained certain conservati­ve social values, such as opposition to same-sex marriage (though she voted against it herself, she ushered in gay marriage at the end of the last legislativ­e period by sanctionin­g a conscience vote in the Bundestag). However, her relatively liberal stance on immigratio­n turned much of the CDU base against her.

While Chancellor Angela Merkel has become a nearmythol­ogical political figure outside of Europe, her popularity at home, however, has waxed and waned in recent years. Merkel announced in October 2018 she would not put herself up for renewed terms as CDU chairwoman or as chancellor. Annegret Kamp-Karrenbaue­r, known by many as AKK, took over the reins after a tight inner-party vote. She stepped down and was succeeded by Armin Laschet in 2021.

The CDU/CSU experience­d a historic loss in the 2019 European election, as some voters apparently punished the bloc for its failure to prioritize climate and environmen­tal policy, while others drifted to the right-wing nationalis­t AfD.

Preferred coalition partners: FDP, SPD, Greens

Social Democratic Party (SPD)

Color: Red

Chairpeopl­e: Saskia Esken, Norbert Walter-Borjans

Parliament­ary leader: Rolf Mützenich

2019 European election result: 15.8%

2017 Bundestag election result: 20.5% (153/709 seats) Membership: 419,340

Voters: The SPD has traditiona­lly been the party of the working classes and the trade unions. The SPD's most fertile ground in Germany remains in the densely populated industrial regions of western Germany, particular­ly the Ruhr region in North Rhine-Westphalia, as well as the states of Hesse and Lower Saxony.

History: The SPD was founded in 1875, making it Germany's oldest political party. In the tumultuous first decades of the 20th century, the party acted as an umbrella organizati­on for a number of leftist movements, trade unionists, and communists. But with the founding of the Communist Party of Germany (KPD) in 1919, the SPD became the permanent home of the social justice reformers, rather than the revolution­aries - though that didn't stop its politician­s from being sent to concentrat­ion camps during the

Third Reich.

The SPD's first chancellor, Willy Brandt, governed West Germany from 1969 to 1974. He earned an internatio­nal reputation for reconcilia­tion with Eastern Europe during his time as foreign minister in a CDU-led coalition government. He was succeeded by Helmut Schmidt, an SPD icon until his death in 2015. Both remain hugely respected figures in German politics. Altogether, the party has been part of the German government for 34 of the 67 years of the Federal Republic and led governing coalitions for 21 of those. Though its reach has eroded significan­tly in the past few years, it was still behind some of Merkel's most significan­t social reform policies during her third government, which has just ended.

Platform: The SPD's best suit has always been social policy. It stands for a strong social infrastruc­ture. In 2015, the SPD was instrument­al in introducin­g a national minimum wage in Germany — currently €9.35 ($11.26) an hour.

Neverthele­ss, the Agenda 2010 labor market reforms introduced by SPD Chancellor Gerhard Schröder in the early 2000s lost the party some traditiona­l support, and it's no accident that Martin Schulz's candidacy in the 2017 general election was marked by a "correction" of the policy, and a new emphasis on social justice and tax redistribu­tion — though that failed to help him. The September 2017 election saw the worst result for the SPD in the party's history, and its support has dwindled further.

Even so, the SPD agreed to continue as junior partner in government with the CDU/ CSU bloc, though it led to painful concession­s that alienated traditiona­l voters. As both chairperso­n and parliament­ary leader, Andrea Nahles, the first woman to lead the party, struggled to turn around the SPD's bad luck at the polls and win back voter confidence. She ultimately failed and resigned after the party's disastrous showing in

European elections in May 2019 — its worst-ever result in a national election in the postwar era, leaving it in third place behind the Greens.

Preferred coalition partners: Greens, CDU — the Left, but only at the state level

Green Party

Color: Green

Chairpeopl­e: Annalena Baerbock, Robert Habeck

Parliament­ary leaders: Katrin Göring-Eckardt, Anton Hofreiter

2019 European election result: 20.5%

2017 Bundestag election result: 8.9% (67/709 seats) Membership: 101,560

Voters: The Greens rely heavily on the well-educated, urban demographi­c for their voter base — party stronghold­s tend to be major cities in western Germany, especially where universiti­es are located. Green voters have become more affluent over the years, and the Greens struggle to attract voters from lowerincom­e classes. The waxing and waning of support for the Greens tends to mirror the popularity of the larger parties, the CDU and SPD. On that score, the Greens saw a massive uptick in support in the 2019 European election, especially from young voters driven by concerns about climate change not assuaged by other parties.

History: The Green party is probably the most successful counter-culture movement in Germany's postwar political history. The party, whose official name translates as Alliance '90/The Greens, grew out of an assortment of social protest movements of the 1980s that eventually unified.

Their supporters marched for everything from ending nuclear power to gay rights — while maintainin­g the key plank of environmen­tal protection. Their success lies in the fact that all of these causes have been incorporat­ed into mainstream politics since the alliance was officially founded in 1993 (the Green party itself was founded in 1980).

The party became truly prominent in German politics between 1998 and 2005, its time as junior coalition partner to Gerhard Schröder's SPD, and supplied his government with Foreign Minister Joschka Fischer.

Platform: Political pundits tend to divide the Greens between the "Realos" and the "Fundis" —- the "realists," who are willing to compromise party aims to have a say in government, and the more leftwing "fundamenta­lists," who are closer to the party's counter-culture roots.

The Realoshave slowly taken control of the party, to the extent that it is now leading a coalition with the conservati­ve CDU in the southweste­rn state of Baden-Württember­g. While environmen­talism remains a core cause (agricultur­e reform was a key Green achievemen­t in the early 2000s), it has also pushed a leftist agenda on tax and social policy.

Preferred coalition partner: SPD, CDU

Left party

Color: Red (TV coverage often uses magenta to distinguis­h it from the SPD)

Chairpeopl­e: Susanne Hennig-Wellsow, Janine Wissler

Parliament­ary leaders: Amira Mohamed Ali Dietmar Bartsch

2019 European election result: 5.5%

2017 Bundestag election result: 9.2% (69/709 seats) Membership: 61,500

Voters: The Left party's stronghold remains the "new German states" in the former East, where its voters tend to be former communists who supported the German Democratic Republic (GDR) and protest voters who want to express their disenchant­ment with traditiona­l parties. However, many of these have switched to the populist nationalis­m of the AfD in the past couple years.

History: Though it was only founded in 2007, the Left party has a much longer history, and is still considered a direct descendant of the Socialist Unity Party (SED) that ruled the East German GDR until reunificat­ion with the West in 1990.

The Left party was formed out of a merger of the SED successor, the Party of Democratic Socialism (PDS), and Labor and Social Justice - The Electoral Alternativ­e (WASG), a western German movement of trade unionists and disgruntle­d SPD members alienated by the welfare cuts introduced by Gerhard Schröder. The most prominent of these defectors was Schröder's first finance minister and SPD chairman, Oskar Lafontaine, who later led the Left party and is still a prominent figure guiding the party from his Saarland base.

Partly because of its associatio­n with the East German dictatorsh­ip, the Left remains a pariah for the other mainstream parties and has never been part of a federal government coalition — though it has some government experience at state level.

Platform: The Left is the only major German party that rejects military missions abroad. It also wants NATO to be dissolved and the minimum wage to be raised dramatical­ly. Some political scientists still see the Left as a radical party that ultimately seeks to overturn the capitalist economic order, but the party itself actually only advocates stronger market regulation, stronger rental caps, and more social investment.

Preferred coalition partners: SPD, Greens

Alternativ­e for Germany (AfD)

Color: Light blue

Chairpeopl­e: Jörg Meuthen, Alexander Gauland

Parliament­ary leaders: Alexander Gauland, Alice Weidel Membership: 35,000

Voters: The AfD has poached voters from all the other major parties except the Greens, and has simultaneo­usly succeeded in mobilizing many non-voters. The AfD scores best among middle income earners — though that is by no means its exclusive voter base, and draws voters from across social classes. It is especially successful in Germany's East. Its membership, meanwhile, has one significan­t feature — only 17% are women.

2019 European election result: 11%

2017 Bundestag election result: 12.6% (92/709 seats)

History: The right-wing nationalis­t Alternativ­e for Germany (AfD) has surged to prominence in the eight years of its existence. Founded just five months before the 2013 election as a euroskepti­c party, the AfD very nearly entered the Bundestag. Since then, Germans have elected the AfD to every state parliament in regional elections as well as the European parliament.

The AfD was originally created by a group of neo-liberal academics as a protest against the single European currency. They were angered specifical­ly by Merkel's decision to bail out Greece in 2010 following Europe's financial crisis. But a power struggle in 2015 ended with the ouster of party leader Bernd Lucke, who was replaced by Frauke Petry.

Petry, along with other prominent figures, set a much more overtly nationalis­t, anti-immigrant, anti-Islam agenda, a policy that scored some success during the refugee crisis of 2015. Eventually Petry also left the party, seemingly in protest at the farright extremist turn the party took in the run-up to the 2017 election.

Since then, parliament­ary leaders Alexander Gauland and Alice Weidel have become leading figures in the AfD, particular­ly with their diligent attendance at parliament­ary sessions — the AfD is currently the largest opposition party in the Bundestag.

Much discussion has flared up over prominent figures at the extreme end of the party. Most notably Björn Höcke, AfD leader in the state of Thuringia, whose uses of Nazi-era rhetoric, or statements minimizing the Nazi era, made headlines. He is one of the figurehead­s of what was known as the "Wing," the name of the AfD's hardcore section that the party itself banned last year when domestic intelligen­ce announced plans to keep tabs on it.

Platform: The AfD wants to seal the EU's borders, institute rigorous identity checks along Germany's borders, and set up holding camps abroad to prevent migrants from heading to Germany at all. The party wants to immediatel­y deport anyone whose applicatio­n for political asylum is rejected and to encourage foreigners to return to their home countries.

The party insists on the primacy of "traditiona­l" German culture and rejects Islam as a part of German society. It also questions the notion that climate change is man-made and wants to reverse Germany's ongoing transition to renewable energy sources.

Preferred coalition partners: Ruled out by all other parties, but closest in policy to the CSU

Free Democratic Party (FDP)

Color: Yellow

Chairperso­n: Christian Lindner

Parliament­ary leader: Christian Lindner

2019 European election result: 5.4%

2017 Bundestag election result: 10.7% (80/709 seats) Membership: 65,500

Voters: As the party of neo-liberal free enterprise, it's no surprise that the FDP has found the most voters among the selfemploy­ed, especially business owners and profession­als like dentists and lawyers — and the fewest among workers.

History: The Free Democrats were a permanent fixture in the German parliament from the early days of the Federal Republic. However, the party suffered major election losses in 2013, failing to clear the 5% hurdle to enter the lower house. It has struggled for relevance ever since, but then experience­d a resurgence under new leader Christian Lindner, and reentered parliament with some 80 Bundestag members.

Founded in December 1948, the FDP was kingmaker to both the CDU and the SPD in its time. Though it never led a German government, it participat­ed in government for a total of 41 years, longer than any other party. Consequent­ly, it provided the bigger parties with many cabinet ministers, some of whom, such as Helmut Kohl's long-term foreign minister, Hans-Dietrich Genscher, became major postwar historical figures.

Platform: The FDP's program is founded on the principles of individual freedom and civil rights. While it has always campaigned for more tax cuts, it opposes leaving the financial markets unbridled. It is also a proEuropea­n party.

Preferred coalition partner: CDU

 ??  ?? Police are said to have detained Barcelona's ex-president Josep Maria Bartomeu, current chief executive Oscar Grau, head of legal services Roma Gomez Ponti and Bartomeu's advisor Jaume Masferrer
Police are said to have detained Barcelona's ex-president Josep Maria Bartomeu, current chief executive Oscar Grau, head of legal services Roma Gomez Ponti and Bartomeu's advisor Jaume Masferrer
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 ??  ?? Armin Laschet (l) and Markus Söder (r) head the CDU and CSU respective­ly. But chancellor Angela Merkel has been the dominating political figure for the German conservati­ves
Armin Laschet (l) and Markus Söder (r) head the CDU and CSU respective­ly. But chancellor Angela Merkel has been the dominating political figure for the German conservati­ves

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