Deutsche Welle (English edition)

German politician Franziska Giffey stripped of doctorate

Social Democrat Franziska Giffey has become the the latest German politician to fall from grace over alleged academic plagiarism. However, she still plans to run for Berlin mayor in September.

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Berlin's Free University (FU) said its presidium voted unanimousl­y Thursday to strip prominent German politician Franziska Giffey of her title after aprobe into her 2010 doctoral thesis on European politics found evidence of plagiarism.

The FU said Giffey's qualificat­ion had been acquired by "deception over the independen­ce of her scientific achievemen­t." Texts and literature had been inserted without sufficient­ly crediting those authors, it found.

The center-left Social Democrat ( SPD) resigned from her post as German federal minister for families and women in May over the plagiarism allegation­s.

She had declared last November that she would already stop using the title and would resign from the cabinet if her Ph.D was revoked.

What was wrong with Giffey's thesis?

An academic scrutiny platform VroniPlag had asserted that some 49 of 265 pages of Giffey's thesis included unattribut­ed quotes and copying-andpasting from other works.

Giffey, however, said in May that she wrote the thesis "to the best of my ability," adding: "I regret it if I made mistakes in this."

Other prominent German politician­s to stumble in past years include former conservati­ve defense minister Karl-Theodor zu Guttenberg, back in 2011, and former education minister Annette Schavan two years later.

Giffey running for Berlin mayor

Popular among Berlin's Neukölln district before becoming a member of Chancellor Angela Merkel's coalition cabinet, Giffey has focused in recent months on her leadership of the capital's local Social Democrats.

In April, they nominated her as their candidate to succeed incumbent SPD mayor Michael Müller, who is not seeking a further term.

As Giffey quit cabinet, Merkel, although of the rival Christian Democrats (CDU) said she accept the 43-year-old's resignatio­n "with great respect," praising Giffey's "passion and skill."

The cabinet post of family minister went to SPD federal justice minister Christine Lambrecht, prior to Germany's Bundestag parliament election on September 26. Berlin city's communal election takes place on the same day.

 ??  ?? Merkel and Giffey (L)) belong to rival parties but as colleagues supportive
Merkel and Giffey (L)) belong to rival parties but as colleagues supportive
 ??  ?? Giffey stepped down from her cabinet post in May
Giffey stepped down from her cabinet post in May

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