ON
← Retour au fil
Le vote sur la réforme des statuts: les Verts devant les tribunaux
Germany🏛️ Politiquehier

Le vote sur la réforme des statuts: les Verts devant les tribunaux

The Green Party's leadership in Germany has approved a constitutional reform through a member vote, which some members argue violates the Party Act by bypassing the traditional party congress process. A group of left-wing members, including Karl-Wilhelm Koch and others, plans to challenge this decision in court, arguing that amendments must be made exclusively at party conventions. The Berlin-based legal expert Sophie Schönberger supports their stance but disagrees with their argument regarding the required voting threshold. The Greens' federal board rejects this interpretation, stating that the relevant clause in the Party Act predates widespread use of member votes and aims to prevent top-down changes. If the lawsuit succeeds, the reform could be referred back to a party convention, though it remains uncertain whether delegates would reject the proposed changes. The reform increases the threshold for submitting proposals at local meetings from 50 to over 90 supporters.

Comment chaque camp l’a couvert

Le même événement, regroupé selon l’orientation politique des médias qui le couvrent.

Comment chaque camp l’a couvert

Soutenez une information indépendante et consciente des biais, et débloquez le pouls social, le vote communautaire et votre fil Pour vous personnalisé.

Devenir soutien

Couverture dans le monde

Le même événement tel que rapporté dans d’autres pays.

Couverture dans le monde

Soutenez une information indépendante et consciente des biais, et débloquez le pouls social, le vote communautaire et votre fil Pour vous personnalisé.

Devenir soutien

Vérification des affirmations

Les principales affirmations factuelles et combien de sources les confirment ou les contestent.

Vérification des affirmations

Soutenez une information indépendante et consciente des biais, et débloquez le pouls social, le vote communautaire et votre fil Pour vous personnalisé.

Devenir soutien

Aller aux sources primaires (1)

Les sources officielles sur lesquelles repose la couverture. Lisez-les directement pour contourner le cadrage.

1 articles

taz – die tageszeitung logotaz – die tageszeitungIndépendantCentreFactualité 85Objectivité 75hier
Le vote sur la réforme des statuts: les Verts devant les tribunaux

The Green Party's leadership in Germany has approved a constitutional reform through a member vote, which some members argue violates the Party Act by bypassing the traditional party congress process. A group of left-wing members, including Karl-Wilhelm Koch and others, plans to challenge this decision in court, arguing that amendments must be made exclusively at party conventions. The Berlin-based legal expert Sophie Schönberger supports their stance but disagrees with their argument regarding the required voting threshold. The Greens' federal board rejects this interpretation, stating that the relevant clause in the Party Act predates widespread use of member votes and aims to prevent top-down changes. If the lawsuit succeeds, the reform could be referred back to a party convention, though it remains uncertain whether delegates would reject the proposed changes. The reform increases the threshold for submitting proposals at local meetings from 50 to over 90 supporters.

Lecture du biais (Centre): The article presents both perspectives—those supporting the member vote and those opposing it via legal challenges—without overtly favoring either side. It includes quotes from both the Greens' leadership and critics, along with legal opinions, providing balanced coverage of a contentious issue.

Pourquoi ces scores (Factualité 85 · Objectivité 75): The article accurately reports the legal challenge against the Greens' constitutional reform process, including the court filing by 130 members. It mentions the proposed changes to party structure and the legal arguments raised by opponents. However, it leans slightly towards the opposition’s perspe

Gardons l’information honnête.

ObjectiveNews est financé par ses lecteurs et sans publicité : nous vous montrons le biais au lieu de le cacher. Soutenez un journalisme indépendant pour 5 €/mois.

Devenir soutien

Sujets liés