Enlarge image
Ex-SPD politician Thilo Sarrazin
Photo: Maurizio Gambarini/ dpa
In 2020, the SPD expelled the author Thilo Sarrazin from the party after several years of internal discussion.
Exclusion proceedings against former chancellor Gerhard Schröder have now failed – and the man who was expelled is anything but in agreement with the decision of the party arbitration commission.
"Either the SPD is completely free of morals or they believe that a book critical of Islam is worse than support for a brutal dictator like Putin," said the former politician of the "Bild".
In any case, "a double standard" is used here.
Sarrazin was expelled from the SPD in 2020, but he gave up his resistance a little later.
It was sparked by several of Sarrazin's books, including 2018's Hostile Takeover: How Islam Impedes Progress and Threatens Society.
Many criticized the books as racist and riddled with prejudice.
Sarrazin himself thought he had written academic non-fiction.
The SPD leadership, on the other hand, argued that Sarrazin's anti-Muslim theses violated the party's principles and caused it damage.
“Not without agreement with the party executive”
According to the "Bild" report, Sarrazin is certain "that in my case and in the case of Gerhard Schröder, the decision was not made without consultation with the party executive and party chairmanship".
Former Chancellor Schröder was heavily criticized for his commitment to Russian state-owned companies and his closeness to President Vladimir Putin, especially after Russia's attack on Ukraine at the end of February.
More than a dozen SPD branches applied for party order proceedings against the 78-year-old.
The responsible arbitration commission of the SPD sub-district Hanover decided on Monday in the first instance that Schröder could not be proven to have violated the party order.
She sees no basis for a complaint or even an exclusion from the party.
An appeal against the decision can be made within two weeks.
From the point of view of Schröder's lawyer, no other decision was to be expected.
Michael Nagel told the "Neue Osnabrücker Zeitung" that Schröder had "clearly distanced himself from the war from the start and described Russia's decision as a mistake".
However, the decision of the commission was not well received by comrades in the south-west.
"The verdict disappoints me personally and disappoints us as the SPD district association in Heidelberg," said the deputy head of the SPD in the city, Tim Tugendhat, on Monday.
His association was among those who pushed Schröder's exclusion.
We reserve the right to appeal, he said.
In the course of Tuesday, all sections would decide together whether to appeal.
mrc/dpa