Corona pandemic: New compromise proposal for compulsory corona vaccination from the age of 60

Corona pandemic: New compromise proposal for compulsory corona vaccination from the age of 60

Will there be a general corona vaccination requirement in Germany or not? The Bundestag will decide on Thursday. At least there is movement in the search for a compromise.

There is movement in the struggle for a majority-capable compromise for general corona vaccination in Germany.

The two groups of deputies in the Bundestag, who have each introduced their own draft legislation for compulsory vaccination, agreed on Tuesday on a joint proposal for compulsory vaccination from the age of 60. First, the editorial network Germany reported about it. This increases the chances of the vote, which is planned for this Thursday without the usual group guidelines.

As it says in a statement, “a vaccination certificate is to be mandatory for all people over the age of 60, i.e. the particularly vulnerable population group”. It should be fulfilled by October. This obligation should be able to be suspended with a Bundestag resolution in June if the vaccination rate could be increased sufficiently. In the autumn, against the background of the then prevailing knowledge and potential virus variants, the Bundestag is to decide “whether the activation of the obligation to provide proof of vaccination for age groups from 18 years of age should also take effect”.

Proposed by Dahmen and Wiese

Specifically, it is the group around SPD parliamentary group leader Dirk Wiese and the Greens health expert Janosch Dahmen, who initially aimed for compulsory vaccination from the age of 18. On Monday she already presented a compromise proposal for a duty from the age of 50 with the option of extending it to all adults. The second group around the FDP health politician Andrew Ullmann had proposed a duty to advise and then a possible vaccination requirement from the age of 50.

The initiative, which originally proposed mandatory vaccinations from 18, has so far been supported by 237 MPs. The group for compulsory vaccination from 50 initially supported around 45 parliamentarians.

Decision without faction specifications

The Bundestag should decide on the vaccination obligation, for which Chancellor Olaf Scholz (SPD) is also committed, without the usual parliamentary group specifications. However, there is already a dispute about the order in which the various initiatives will be voted on. Union faction leader Friedrich Merz (CDU) said: “I want to expressly warn the coalition against manipulation on Thursday in the order of the votes with regard to this topic.”

“I still believe that we will decide on compulsory vaccination on Thursday,” said Federal Minister of Health Karl Lauterbach (SPD) on Tuesday in Berlin. The MPs are willing to take a sensible approach against an impending new corona wave in the fall. SPD faction leader Rolf Mützenich said: “Until the end we will try everything that there is a compromise between the different groups.”

Meanwhile, the planned end of isolation requirements for people infected with corona in Germany on May 1st has met with widespread criticism. Scientists, social organizations and politicians protested sharply against additional easing shortly after the end of many state protection requirements. Lauterbach defended the new rules agreed with the states. The federal and state governments had agreed that infected people should voluntarily self-isolate for five days in the future – as an urgent recommendation, but no longer as an order from the health department.

Source: Stern

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