Luisa Neubauer was a bit at a loss. picture: screenshot zdf
Luisa Neubauer derails facial expressions according to "Markus Lanz"
09/22/2021, 4:53 p.m.dirk KrampitzMore "Entertainment" Frauke Ludowig addresses climate activists on "Stern TV": "You are not a role model" Jungle camp Jungle camp Voting results: Anouschka should have left much earlier "Verkackte Show": Rapper Farid Bang snaps after being kicked out by "DSDS" candidate "Bauer sucht Frau" candidate Antonia reveals her beauty secret: "One of the few who do it "RTL presenter Lola Weippert ended up in the hospital - that's whyFor the viewers, the topics of Markus Lanz's talk show are always a certain surprise. And apparently for the guests sometimes too. This time Lanz had invited to the traffic light summit without the guests really being aware of it. Because when Lanz reads his introduction, in which he explains that it's about "understanding a little what kind of country it would be if it actually came to a traffic light," a guest's facial features slip away. Sitting in the studio with Lanz:
Neubauer looks at Markus Lanz in disbelief. picture: screenshot zdfFridays for Future activist Luisa Neubauer cannot hide her amazement. The moderator wants to know later whether she is not a member of the Greens. "On paper - what does that mean!" she replies. And actions against the climate crisis are the task of every democratic party. But the limit of a maximum temperature increase of 1.5 degrees laid down in the Paris climate agreement is not taken seriously enough.
"Nobody has a plan for 1.5 degrees, neither party has the courage to mention the interventions that are necessary."Luisa NeubauerAnd that is also logical. Because if you describe the situation as seriously as it is, you cannot justify why you are postponing the coal phase-out until 2038
"Sorry, Kevin," she turns to Kevin Kühnert with a look. He jumps in immediately and emphasizes that the SPD wants to complete the exit faster if possible, but it's always a process. "Welcome to politics," he says, sighing as well as instructing. But Luisa Neubauer counters. "Kevin, welcome to the climate crisis. It's not about just doing a little bit more. If we're going to open it up, we've got to do enough." And so it goes back and forth.
Neubauer says that only radical measures can help, but politicians are softening this message. "It is quite logical that people are more afraid of the increase in the commuter allowance than of the increase in sea level, as is being communicated." All in all, it is a "reality-free election campaign" that does not prepare people for "what is really necessary". "Nevertheless, action must be taken and it is completely unclear how this is to be approached."
FDP General Secretary Volker Wissing pulls a study out of a hat. picture: screenshot zdfFDP General Secretary Volker Wissing sees it differently. He has an idea: emission certificate trading. "By the way, that's the only thing that works," he believes. Luisa Neubauer sighs loudly and facepalms a bit, while Wissing brings up a brand new study by the University of Magdeburg, unknown to everyone else in the group and commissioned by the FDP.
She praises the FDP's climate policy and its concept of preventing CO2 where it is cheapest to prevent. How exactly Wissing means that is not really clear. He cites figures according to which one ton of CO2 can be prevented from 60 euros, but with the "government's e-car policy" these costs are 2388 euros per ton. According to the FDP concept, only a number of certificates corresponding to Paris standards should be issued. "Who has a better concept than that the Paris Agreement must be respected?"
Luisa Neubauer is not enthusiastic. "Now one would rather wish that you let the professionals do it - the concept of all democratic parties is better than yours. It is not plausible, you can sugarcoat it. In your party program it is not possible to understand how you plausibly the budget want to comply with." She then mockingly asks: "And the study you commissioned surprisingly found out that your proposals are the best? I hope people don't vote for the FDP for climate reasons." Okay, maybe if young people vote for the FDP because they think they'll get rich, they'll send a tip afterwards.
Kevin Kühnert made many home visits. picture: screenshot zdf"I went to the show with a headache and now my head is bursting."Kevin KühnertKevin Kühnert interferes, annoyed. In the discussion about climate protection, "the language for the debate in society" is missing. He rang the bell on 50,000 house and apartment doors in his Berlin campaign district of Tempelhof-Schoeneberg. (By the way, that would be more than 400 home visits every day for four months). He noticed that people are primarily concerned with the everyday things in their lives. About the price of gas. "I will not get you to make other political decisions with a one-hour PowerPoint presentation about the dire developments that lie ahead."
During the election campaign, Luisa Neubauer missed out, and that evening the climate crisis torpedoed traffic light speculation. Even if it was also about a possible grand coalition, which Kühnert wants to prevent "at all costs", just like the Union's participation in government, "because we know very well what that means for government business".
Wissing leans back, knowing full well that his FDP is very likely to be needed for a majority, even if Lanz tries to lure him out of his reserve when he sees the substantive rapprochement between Olaf Scholz and Annalena Baerbock in the last trill of candidates with "That was shortly before Elitepartner".
Wissing does not want to set the minimum wage politically because he would rather have the interaction with the labor market thought through by a commission of experts. Kühnert does not vote in Berlin on Saturday to expropriate Deutsche Wohnen. The big housing groups are not the main problem, but rather real estate speculation: "Buy it, refine it and sell it again after ten years" with a hefty profit.
At the end, Wissing presented the idea of a "share pension" and Kühnert also found it better than the failed Riester pension. Only Neubauer sighs meaningfully. "I would like to worry about my pension in 2070..."