Friday, August 29, 2025

Polaris of Enlightenment

Former German vice chancellor: The era of establishment parties may soon be over

Published today 12:46
– By Editorial Staff
German politician Robert Habeck believes that the traditional "system parties" in Germany will continue to lose voters going forward and slowly collapse.
3 minute read

Germany’s former Vice Chancellor Robert Habeck and co-leader of the Green Party explicitly warns of the impending collapse of establishment parties in Germany. He also states that he cannot see any realistic solutions within the political system he himself helped build.

Habeck, who also has a background as finance minister, announces that he is leaving active politics with a grim prognosis for the country’s established political parties. In an interview with German newspaper Taz, he warns that the dominance of established parties is approaching its end.

— If the legislative period continues as it has so far, CDU/CSU and SPD will not have their own majority after the next Bundestag election. More likely is that they lose one to two percentage points per year. Then it’s over for the people’s parties, and then forever.

He paints a picture of parties in free fall where “CDU/CSU is not fighting for 30 percent, but to get over 20. And SPD is not fighting to catch up with CDU/CSU, but to maintain ten percent”.

Habeck, who was previously co-leader of the Green Party, will submit his Bundestag mandate next week, and he is ruthless in his criticism of the current government.

— That this government represents any consensus in Germany, they don’t even believe that themselves, he argues.

— Politically desirable democratic alternatives are not on offer. A new approach must be found. And I can’t find that within the confines of the system I helped build over the last 20 years, he admits.

Will teach in Sweden

The so-called traffic light coalition – consisting of the Greens, the social democratic SPD, and the liberal FDP – collapsed in November 2024 after the parties could not agree on how to handle a budget deficit of several billion euros for 2025.

Habeck himself belongs to the circle that has been identified as personally responsible for Germany’s prolonged economic decline. In Monday’s interview, the politician explains that he needs distance and “moves forward by going abroad next year”.

— I need to distance myself from the overly restrictive corset of Berlin’s political system.

The politician reveals that he will research and teach at institutions in Denmark, Sweden, and the USA. He simultaneously denies that the move would mean he is withdrawing from political debate.

Merz wants to abolish the welfare state

In the new election on February 23, his party received about 12 percent of the votes, while SPD ended up at 16.5 percent – their worst result since World War II. The FDP barely cleared the four percent threshold.

Under the new government, economic problems have continued. Federal Chancellor Friedrich Merz announced on Saturday that Germany finds itself in a deep structural crisis and declared that the country will no longer be able to afford to finance the current welfare system.

Critics and opposition argue that Germany’s establishment parties have actively driven the country into the ground through, among other things, costly political experiments such as the mass immigration of millions of people from the Third World and unreasonably prioritizing the military project in Ukraine over citizens’ welfare.

TNT is truly independent!

We don’t have a billionaire owner, and our unique reader-funded model keeps us free from political or corporate influence. This means we can fearlessly report the facts and shine a light on the misdeeds of those in power.

Consider a donation to keep our independent journalism running…

Merz: “Germany can no longer afford welfare”

The destruction of the European economy

Published 26 August 2025
– By Editorial Staff
For several decades, regime critics warned that Germany's destructive policies would crush the welfare state – under Merz, it appears this is becoming reality.
3 minute read

German Chancellor and former BlackRock executive Friedrich Merz now states that the country can no longer afford to finance its current welfare system. At the same time, he rules out tax increases for medium-sized companies and promises to defend their interests.

— The welfare state that we have today can no longer be financed with what we produce in the economy, Merz said at a party conference for the Christian Democratic Union (CDU) in Osnabrück on Saturday.

The statement comes as Germany has sent nearly 40 billion euros in aid to Ukraine since the war began in 2022. The country has also received millions of migrants since the turn of the millennium, which has resulted in very high costs for the public sector.

Merz’s message aligns with what several European actors have argued for in recent years – that Europe must cut welfare spending in order to invest in military rearmament instead. The Chancellor himself has previously made clear that continued support for Ukraine is something he prioritizes very highly.

Already 40-50 years ago, immigration critics warned that mass immigration would eventually lead to overburdened welfare systems. They predicted that ordinary people in general, and particularly vulnerable groups, would in practice be forced to pay the highest price for the consequences and enormous costs of mass immigration.

Demands reforms – but no corporate taxes

Merz’s demands for comprehensive welfare reforms are expected to lead to increased tensions with coalition partner the Social Democrats (SPD). The Chancellor acknowledged that welfare cuts will be difficult for the center-left party to swallow, but still called for cooperation.

At the same time, he made clear that companies should be protected from tax increases.

— There will not be any increase in income tax on medium-sized companies in Germany with this federal government under my leadership.

This despite the fact that SPD deputy party leader Lars Klingbeil previously opened the door to tax increases on middle and high earners to finance welfare.

SPD warns against cuts

The Social Democrats signal resistance to pure cuts in the welfare system, and Klingbeil emphasizes that any reforms must contain “imaginative solutions” rather than just savings that affect workers.

— We will remain a country that helps people who have fallen onto hard times, who have gotten sick and need help, it states.

Philipp Türmer, leader of the SPD’s youth organization Jusos, is even more categorical. If the purpose of the reforms is just to cut benefits, “the SPD cannot give an inch”, he tells the daily newspaper Stuttgarter Zeitung.

Pressure from AfD

The coalition parties have already agreed on the need to drastically cut the social insurance system – which includes health insurance, pensions and unemployment benefits. This is due to rising costs and budget deficits.

Merz’s comments on Saturday can be seen as an attempt to win back voters who have switched to the immigration- and EU-critical party Alternative for Germany (AfD), and the Chancellor himself admitted that he is not satisfied with the government’s results so far.

— I’m not satisfied with what we have achieved thus far. It has to be more. he told the audience in Osnabrück.

The SPD, which has traditionally seen itself as the defender of the welfare state, finds itself in a difficult position after the party’s voter support collapsed in the latest election. The party is therefore expected to be reluctant to back overly large cuts that could further alienate their core voters.

Sven identifies as Svenja – to serve sentence in women’s prison

Published 23 August 2025
– By Editorial Staff
Outraged left-wing and LGBTQ activists argue that Liebich is making a mockery of the legislation - and that he in particular should not be allowed to identify as a woman.
2 minute read

A German national socialist and hate crime offender has legally changed gender to female and will therefore serve his prison sentence at one of the country’s women’s prisons.

53-year-old Sven Liebich, now Marla-Svenja, is exploiting a new law that makes it possible to “change gender” by simply filling out a form with the authorities.

It was in July 2023 that Sven Liebich was sentenced to one and a half years in prison for the hate speech crimes of incitement against ethnic groups, defamation and insult. But when it came time to serve the sentence, something had changed – Sven had become Marla-Svenja.

Through Germany’s new self-determination law, which came into force in November last year, Liebich only needed to make a simple notification to the civil registry in Schkeuditz to officially change gender and first name. No court, no medical certificates – just a personal declaration.

According to German media, Liebich showed up in court wearing a leopard-print top, large hat, makeup and carrying a handbag. The new Marla-Svenja argued that the gender change was necessary to avoid “discrimination” in a male prison.

The ironic aspect of the situation is that Liebich still wears a mustache when appearing publicly in women’s clothing – something that has caused great anger and frustration among liberals and left-wing activists.

They have also pointed out that the 53-year-old has previously burned Pride flags and described transgender people as “parasites,” and argue that the legal gender change is just a way to mock the new law and troll the German justice system.

Women’s prison in Chemnitz

Now Marla-Svenja Liebich will serve her sentence at the women’s prison in Chemnitz in the German state of Saxony. The decision is based, according to the prosecutor’s office, on two clear criteria: the officially registered gender (female) and the civil registry address.

Saxony’s justice department notes, however, that additional psychological or medical assessments may be used in the future if there are suspicions that someone has intentionally changed gender identity to influence their prison conditions.

When the German self-determination law was introduced, critics warned that people would change legal gender for purely tactical reasons – to gain advantages rather than due to gender dysphoria or other mental health issues.

Liebich is hardly alone in exploiting the law, but his political background has made the case particularly noteworthy. It has also exposed an ironic paradox: Those who normally claim that everyone has the right to define their own gender – and be treated accordingly – now seem to argue that Liebich specifically, because of his political views, should not be covered by this right.

German left-wing newspaper files police report against its own interviewee

Published 14 August 2025
– By Editorial Staff
The editorial management assessed that AfD candidate Jirka Möller had expressed suspected "unconstitutional" and "far-right extremist" views.
2 minute read

The left-liberal German local newspaper Lippische Landes-Zeitung has found a creative solution to the problem of uncomfortable statements from political opponents – they report their own interview subjects to the police.

The newspaper in the state of North Rhine-Westphalia interviewed AfD’s mayoral candidate Jirka Möller. But the editorial staff became so concerned about what the 53-year-old said that they both censored the interview and sent the deleted parts “to responsible authorities for review”.

Möller, a trained chef and family man, had according to the newspaper made statements that could be “unconstitutional” or could “show far-right extremist tendencies”.

When the interview was published, it was filled with the editorial staff’s own comments in italics. These were claimed to “put the statements in context”.

The newspaper dismissed, among other things, Möller’s claim that the German government is controlled by a “new world order” as a “far-right conspiracy theory without evidence”, reports the conservative Junge Freiheit.

“Presumably punishable statements”

The editorial staff also corrected his claim that AfD is no longer classified as “confirmed far-right extremist”. The newspaper was careful to emphasize that this classification has only been “publicly suspended” due to ongoing legal proceedings.

Other statements that received fact-checks concerned everything from entry rules at Swiss swimming facilities to alleged “Islamist invasion” on orders from Iran, as well as Möller’s comparison between gender-inclusive language and George Orwell.

As recently as August 5, the newspaper presented its new policy for handling AfD politicians. Going forward, all interviews will be commented on, allegedly false claims will be marked, and “presumably punishable statements” will not only be censored but also reported to authorities.

Trend in German media

Lippische Landes-Zeitung is not alone in taking a very clear stance against AfD and other less immigration-critical parties. In Aachen, the similarly left-liberal Aachener Zeitung has, for example, organized 16 election debates ahead of the municipal election – but excluded AfD from all of them.

— We report objectively, as neutrally as we can, about everything that happens. But we comment very, very clearly – and that against AfD. Consistently. There is no colleague who doesn’t do it, explained an editor.

AfD’s local branch accuses the newspaper of controlling coverage “through a filter”, where who gets invited to debates depends on how favorably the editorial staff writes about each respective party.

According to the party’s representatives, there is hardly any room for neutral opinion formation when the newspaper has taken such an openly hostile stance against the party in question.

Greece tightens controls with ankle monitors for rejected asylum seekers

Migration crisis in Europe

Published 14 August 2025
– By Editorial Staff
A group of migrants on the Greek island of Lesbos.
1 minute read

Migrants in Greece whose asylum applications are rejected will soon be required to wear ankle monitors as part of the government’s new measures to expedite deportations, a government official announced this week.

Migration Minister Thanos Plevris says the measure will be introduced before the end of the year and will be part of reforms that also criminalize refusal to comply with a deportation order.

— The use of electronic monitoring will make it clear that the options have narrowed, Plevris explains in an interview with state radio channel ERT.

The new rules, which among other things include mandatory prison sentences for those who refuse to leave the country after a deportation order, are to be presented to parliament next month. The delay is due to the sharp increase in the number of migrants arriving by boat from Libya to the Greek island of Crete during the summer.

According to Plevris, electronic monitoring will be used during a 30-day period given to migrants after their asylum applications have been rejected and all appeals have been exhausted.

The government is also considering a deportation bonus of €2,000 for those who voluntarily comply with the decision.

The strict migration policy measures that the conservative government has implemented so far – including a recently introduced ban on asylum applications for migrants arriving by sea from North Africa – have been praised by nationalists and immigration critics, but have drawn strong criticism from the Council of Europe and immigration activists.

Our independent journalism needs your support!
We appreciate all of your donations to keep us alive and running.

Our independent journalism needs your support!
Consider a donation.

You can donate any amount of your choosing, one-time payment or even monthly.
We appreciate all of your donations to keep us alive and running.

Dont miss another article!

Sign up for our newsletter today!

Take part of uncensored news – free from industry interests and political correctness from the Polaris of Enlightenment – every week.