Frankfust’s Lord Mayor Peter Feldmann voted out

Frankfust’s Lord Mayor Peter Feldmann voted out

The citizens of Frankfurt am Main put their mayor, Peter Feldmann, in front of the town hall door. The SPD politician was voted out after several scandals.

The term of office of the mayor of Frankfurt am Main is over after a good ten years. In a vote on Sunday, the overwhelming majority of the participating citizens voted in favor of Peter Feldmann being voted out of office.

The necessary quorum of 152,455 votes (30 percent of those eligible to vote) for voting out the SPD politician had already been reached before all the votes were counted. According to the preliminary result of the decision, a total of around 95.1 percent (201,825 people) voted in favor of deselection. 4.9 percent (10,371) were against. According to the city administration, participation in the vote was 41.9 percent.

Feldmann admitted his defeat and announced his retirement. Next Friday, the municipal elections committee will determine the official final result – then he will lose his job.

In July, a two-thirds majority in the city parliament, including his own party, voted to vote Feldmann out of office. Because he did not accept the vote, the people of Frankfurt were now asked.

Peter Feldmann hit the headlines nationwide

Peter Feldmann has been mayor of Frankfurt since 2012 and was re-elected in 2018. Recently, however, the missteps of the 64-year-old politician have increased.

The mayor’s appearances in connection with Eintracht Frankfurt’s win in the Europa League made headlines nationwide. Shortly before the presentation of the trophy on the Römer’s balcony by the trainer and team, Feldmann took the trophy from the athletes’ hands and walked through the hall of the town hall with it. He also made a name for himself with a sexist statement on the flight to the final venue in Seville about the flight attendants: They would have “hormonally put him out of action,” said Feldmann at the time over the aircraft’s on-board microphone. Eintracht Frankfurt’s board spokesman, Axel Hellmann, then said that the mayor was no longer welcome in the Waldstadion. Feldmann publicly regretted his missteps and apologized.

However, allegations of corruption against Feldmann are likely to weigh more heavily than the tactlessness: In March, the public prosecutor’s office brought charges on suspicion of accepting an advantage (). It’s about Feldmann’s close ties to Arbeiterwohlfahrt (Awo). Feldmann’s wife is said to have received a salary in excess of the collective agreement as the head of an Awo day-care center “without any objective reason”. According to the public prosecutor’s office, Awo also supported Feldmann in the 2018 election campaign by raising donations. In return, he wanted to “benevolently consider” the interests of Awo Frankfurt. Feldmann rejects the allegations and emphasized several times: “I’m not corrupt.” The process is running.

Recently he caused criticism in the court again: In a statement that his lawyer read out, it was said that he had married his wife because of an unwanted pregnancy. He later apologized to his daughter for the passage about his view at the time that the child should be aborted better.

Editor’s note: This article has been updated since it was first published.

Sources: , News agencies DPA and AFP

Source: Stern

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