Deutsche Welle (English edition)

Merkel 'successor' criticized for laughing during flood visit

The CDU's chancellor candidate Armin Laschet apologized for his "inappropri­ate" laughter while Germany's president spoke at the scene of disastrous floods. Laschet is the current frontrunne­r in the September election.

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Armin Laschet, the premier of North Rhine-Westphalia and chancellor candidate of Angela Merkel's center-right CDU, was heavily criticized on Sunday for laughing in one of the towns that was devastated by the recent floods.

The veteran CDU politician was caught in the background of a video of German President Frank-Walter Steinmeier speaking to reporters in Erfstadt, one of the worst-hit areas that was the scene of dramatic rescue efforts.

As Steinmeier gave a statement to reporters, Laschet and a group of others could be seen standing around in the background engaged in conversati­on with the state premier laughing enthusiast­ically.

Laschet apologized on Twitter, saying his behavior had been "inappropri­ate."

''The fate of those affected, which we heard about in many conversati­ons, is important to us,'' he wrote. "So I regret all the more the impression that arose from a conversati­onal situation. That was inappropri­ate and I am sorry,'' the CDU politician said.

German newspaper Bild reported that Laschet and his companions could not hear what Steinmeier was saying, as the audio did not reach them.

'Laughing Laschet'

But outrage poured on social media and in the Sunday papers,

as a distraught country reeled from what Merkel called a "catastroph­ic" situation in the flood areas.

The hashtag #Laschetlac­ht (Laschet laughs) was a top trending topic on Twitter and the incident was discussed across German media.

Opposition parties heavily criticized the center-right chancellor candidate. "The way Armin Laschet is joking around in the background while President Frank-Walter Steinmeier is speaking to victims is without decency and outrageous," Lars Klingbeil, secretary general of the Social Democrats (SPD), told German newspaper Bild am Sonntag.

Although the SPD are currently in a grand coalition with the Merkel's CDU, they are running against them in the September 26 polls.

"They say that in times of crisis, one's true character reveals itself," Klingbeil told the newspaper, adding that Laschet had "disqualifi­ed himself."

The liberal FDP party also attacked him, with deputy parliament­ary leader Michael Theurer telling saying that "fooling around without a mask while the president remembers the victims does not do justice to the seriousnes­s of the situation."

Frontrunne­r in race for chancellor

Recent opinion polls had put Laschet well ahead in the race to become chancellor this September, with his conservati­ve bloc having a near 10-percentage-point lead over the Greens.

The Greens' chancellor candidate Annalena Baerbock had initially taken the lead but faltered after controvers­ies regarding possible plagiarism in her CV and her book. The allegation­s appeared to have hurt her standing in the polls.

Her party has put climate change front and center in their agenda to govern Germany. With experts linking the climate crisis to extreme weather events like this month's devastatin­g floods, the topic is likely to be revived on the campaign trail.

Laschet has been accused of not pursuing environmen­tallyfrien­dly policies at the state level in North Rhine-Westphalia, but in response to the floods he said he supported speeding up efforts to combat climate change.

 ??  ?? Premier of North Rhine-Westphalia Armin Laschet (center) seen laughing during the event
Premier of North Rhine-Westphalia Armin Laschet (center) seen laughing during the event

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