[ad_1]
National Councilor Senior Vice President Andreas Glarner (57) can’t help it. After verbally attacking Sibel Arslan (40), National Councilor for the Greens, on the sidelines of the Klimademo on the Bundesplatz last week, he is now on Facebook.
Advances in sight
The Aargau politician publishes a selection of proposals that Arslan has presented to parliament. He chose those who have a connection to foreign policy. Glarner’s comment on this: “Judge for yourself: do you really represent the interests of the Swiss?” By doing so, you are implicitly denying him the ability to represent Swiss citizens in parliament.
In last week’s scandal, she referred to her colleague from the Basel National Council as an “arschlan” and implied that she was not Swiss. “Law and order, Ms. Arschlan, that didn’t exist in your state!” He threw at her in public. She was responding to the fact that Arslan has dual Turkish-Swiss citizenship. Glarner later said that the confusion of Arslan’s name was a slip.
SVPers are angry
Glarner, who repeatedly deliberately crosses the lines of decency, subsequently had to, once again, compete with the leader of the vice-presidential parliamentary group, Thomas Aeschi (41), as he learned from VIEW. Aeschi and Glarner deny it upon request. The leader of the parliamentary group does not comment on the latest Glarner derailment.
One thing is clear: the parliamentary group does not enjoy Glarner’s verbal failures. Last week SVP MPs quietly expressed their discontent with their stalker colleague. And even at the base, some people gradually have enough. A Junge SVP St. Gallen representative writes on Twitter: “The Swiss people who vote for or have re-elected Ms. Arslan feel well represented by her. I feel pretty bad represented by you, Andi, in the last few months. You just exaggerate. “
Arslan reviews the complaint
Glarner’s uncontrollable provocations were also the reason that party leaders did not want Aargauer to be the new party chairman. But Glarner is not impressed. Keep provoking, no matter how many conference rooms there may be.
Glarner knows very well that his accusation that Arslan does not represent the interests of Switzerland because of his actions is unfounded. It is obvious that Arslan, as a member of the Foreign Policy Commission (APK) in the Council, is primarily engaged with foreign policy issues. Just like other APK members do.
Arslan announced last week that he would examine a complaint against Glarner.