Germany's Laschet tells SPD rival to apologise for criticism of ministry
raids
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[September 11, 2021]
BERLIN (Reuters) - Armin Laschet,
the conservative candidate to succeed Angela Merkel as Germany's
chancellor in this month's election, demanded an apology from his Social
Democrat rival on Saturday for criticising a money-laundering probe
which included raids on his ministry.
Prosecutors raided the finance and justice ministries on Thursday as
part of an investigation into the government's anti-money laundering
agency, shining a spotlight on Germany's failings in tackling financial
crime.
The raids come at a pivotal moment for Finance Minister Olaf Scholz,
whose SPD is leading opinion polls before national elections on Sept.
26. In responding to the raids, Scholz had said prosecutors could have
put their straightforward questions in writing.
"At a time when prosecutors are searching a ministry, the right response
is to say we will help prosecutors, not to cast doubt on the rule of
law. That helps populists when you react like that," Laschet told the
Bavarian CSU party conference to thunderous applause from delegates.
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"I hope he apologises," said Laschet, adding Germany should be a model
in accepting the actions of justice officials while it criticises
populist governments elsewhere for discrediting prosecutors and judges.
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Armin Laschet, Christian Democratic Union of Germany (CDU) candidate
for chancellor on stage with CDU secretary general Paul Ziemiak and
Markus Blume, Secretary General of the CDU's Bavarian sister party
Christian Social Union CSU following the CSU party meeting in
Nuremberg, Germany, September 11, 2021. REUTERS/Wolfgang Rattay
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Laschet, head of Merkel's Christian Democrats (CDU), is struggling to
appeal to voters and the conservative bloc is trailing in polls for the
election in which Merkel is not running for a historic fifth term.
CDU grandees backed Laschet in April as the
conservative chancellor candidate ahead of Markus Soeder, the more
popular leader of the CSU. The two parties form a parliamentary
bloc.
Some in the CSU are less than enthusiastic about Laschet's candidacy
but the CDU leader received cheers and a standing ovation at the end
of a wide-ranging conference speech.
A FGW poll on Friday put support for the SPD at 25%, ahead of the
CDU/CSU bloc on 22%, the Greens on 17%. The liberal Free Democrats (FDP)
and far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD) were both on 11% and the
far-left Linke on 6%.
(Reporting by Madeline Chambers; Editing by Mike Harrison)
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