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Is the blessing of the house with Chancellor Ignazio Cassis (59) wrong? Is your marriage with Mrs. Paola (57) in crisis? The Federal Council of the FDP has not worn a wedding ring for some time. And that’s around 28 years after the two were married in the Romanesque church of San Pietro e Paolo in Biasca TI. Until death do them part, as is not uncommon in Ticino.
But thank goodness not everything is so wild! “I lost the ring and I can’t find it. My wife and I look everywhere at home ”, reveals Cassis to the portal of the Catholic church“ kath.ch ”. At some point, the ring will reappear, the Federal Council says for sure.
I secretly tasted the altar wine as an altar boy
Cassis also talks from the sewing box in the interview. He talks about the role of religion in his childhood in Ticino. It is clear: as an altar boy, he had everything behind his ears. “Sometimes we did something that was forbidden, for example, we secretly tasted some altar wine in the sacristy,” he says. “And when I moved the smoke barrel, of course I wanted to make as much smoke as possible.”
But Cassis also admits that politics and religion sometimes conflict with him. Pope Francis (83), for example, has expressed great sympathy for the corporate responsibility initiative, which Switzerland will vote on on November 29. The chancellor, in turn, opposes the referendum.
Conflicting goals are part of a democracy
“The Federal Council rejects the initiative, although it shares the basic objective,” says Cassis. But she understands why Pope Francis is campaigning for her. But: “The Federal Council finds it problematic for Swiss courts to judge what is happening in other countries.” That violates the territorial principle and opens Pandora’s box. “What if tomorrow foreign courts judge our cases?”
At first glance, Cassis faces a similar dilemma over the remediation initiative that aims to ban arms exports to countries in civil war. That is already prohibited today, declares the liberal his refusal.
“The industry can export under very restrictive conditions because we have an army that depends on an arms industry,” he continues. “We want peace, but also security.” That is a conflict of objectives. These conflicting goals are part of a democracy. (dba)