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The polling stations closed at 8 p.m. sharp on Sunday evening – and France has decided: the previous President Emmanuel Macron has prevailed. stern reporter Andrea Ritter reports that the mood on election night in Paris was vague.
France has voted – and according to the projections, the new, old president won: the neoliberal Emmanuel Macron with his party La République en Marche. So there will be no change in the Élysée Palace, although the turnout was low, the result less clear than five years ago.
“Some people voted for Macron, but without much enthusiasm. You knew you had to vote for Macron to prevent Le Pen,” reports journalist and France expert Andrea Ritter. She followed the election evening in Paris and reports a rather moderate mood there: “Emmanuel Macron is seen as the president of the rich, as arrogant, as the one who has increased social injustice. That is not entirely justified, but it still reflects the mood reflected in Paris.”

© TVNOW / Andreas Friese
Podcast “important today”
Sure, opinionated, on the 12: “today important” is not just a news podcast. We set topics and initiate debates – with attitude and sometimes uncomfortable. Host Michel Abdollahi and his team speak out for this star– and RTL reporters with the most exciting people from politics, society and entertainment. They let all voices have their say, both the quiet and the loud. Anyone who hears “important today” starts the day well informed and can have a well-founded say.
Intensive care nurse: “I’m now disappointed with Lauterbach”
In the very first episode “important today” she was a guest, intensive care nurse Nina Zander. A year later, in the 260th episode, the 32-year-old reports again about moments that she will never forget: “A colleague of mine died of Corona last year”. Helping people, supporting relatives, life and death – all of this is Nina Zander’s everyday life in a Cologne intensive care unit, which is why she became a nurse. But many problems that were already present a year ago are still there. At first, Zander had high hopes for Health Minister Karl Lauterbach: “I am now disappointed in him. He is very focused on the Corona policy itself […]but he still leaves us out in the rain.”
Away from mass processing in care
The trained geriatric nurse is finally calling for action: “We have to get away from undignified mass processing.” In addition, the industry needs adjusted salaries, not only in nursing. And: “The training for junior staff must be made much more attractive.” However, the 32-year-old believes that there are also some colleagues who have long since given up hope of better working conditions.
Therefore, in an interview with podcast host Michel Abdollahi, she demands: “Anyone who works in the healthcare sector can become active themselves (…). We can all join bodies, we can join a professional association, a trade union, a nursing chamber. We have to organize ourselves.”
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Source: Stern

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