Difference between revisions of "Annalena Baerbock"

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'''Annalena Charlotte Alma Baerbock''' is a German politician serving as the co-leader of [[Alliance 90/The Greens]] since 2018 alongside [[Robert Habeck]]. She is also the Green Party candidate for [[Chancellor of Germany|Chancellor]] in the [[2021 German federal election]], being considered the first such candidate for the Greens with a serious chance of winning this high office.<ref name="nyt">https://www.nytimes.com/2021/04/19/world/europe/germany-greens-chancellor-annalena-baerbock.html</ref>  
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'''Annalena Charlotte Alma Baerbock''' is a German politician serving as the co-leader of [[Alliance 90/The Greens]] since 2018 alongside [[Robert Habeck]]. She is also the Green Party candidate for [[Chancellor of Germany|Chancellor]] in the [[2021 German parliamentary election]], being considered the first such candidate for the Greens with a serious chance of winning this high office.<ref name="nyt">https://www.nytimes.com/2021/04/19/world/europe/germany-greens-chancellor-annalena-baerbock.html</ref>  
  
 
==Career==
 
==Career==

Revision as of 12:23, 14 June 2021

5Person.png Annalena Baerbock  Rdf-entity.pngRdf-icon.png
(politician)
Annalena-404x500.png
Born15 December 1980
NationalityGerman
Alma materUniversity of Hamburg, London School of Economics, British Institute of International and Comparative Law
Member ofEuropean Council on Foreign Relations, Marshall Memorial Fellowship, WEF/Young Global Leaders/2020
"A perfect product of transatlantic leader selection."

Employment.png Leader of Alliance 90/The Greens

In office
27 January 2018 - Present
Preceded byCem Özdemir
Co-chair with Robert Habeck

Employment.png Member of the Bundestag Wikipedia-icon.png

In office
22 September 2013 - Present
Preceded bySabine Leutheusser-Schnarrenberger

Annalena Charlotte Alma Baerbock is a German politician serving as the co-leader of Alliance 90/The Greens since 2018 alongside Robert Habeck. She is also the Green Party candidate for Chancellor in the 2021 German parliamentary election, being considered the first such candidate for the Greens with a serious chance of winning this high office.[1]

Career

Baerbock is being heavily hyped by the Powers That Be. Here a 2021 front page from Stern Magazine "finally something different"

As a teenager, Baerbock was a competitive trampoline gymnast, taking part in German championships and winning bronze three times. From 2000 to 2004, Baerbock studied political science and public law at the University of Hamburg. In 2005, she graduated with a master's degree in Public International Law from the London School of Economics (LSE). In 2005, she completed a traineeship at the British Institute of International and Comparative Law (BIICL).[2]

During her studies, Baerbock worked as a journalist for the Hannoversche Allgemeine Zeitung from 2000 to 2003.[3] After her studies, Baerbock worked from 2005 to 2008 in the office of MEP Elisabeth Schroedter and, in 2005, as a trainee at the British Institute of Comparative and Public International Law. Between 2008 and 2009, she worked as an adviser on foreign and security policies for the parliamentary group of the Alliance 90/The Greens in the Bundestag.[2]

Since 2020 Baerbock has been a participant in the World Economic Forum's Young Global Leaders program, an ongoing coaching program for political leaders that created successful leaders like Emmanuel Macron, Sanna Marin or Jacinda Ardern.[4]

Veteran journalist Diana Johnstone, who used to work as press spokesman for The European Greens, described her thus:

Baerbock is 40 years old, just about a year younger that the Green Party itself. She is the mother of two small children, a former trampoline champion, who smiles even while speaking – a clean image of happy, innocent fitness. She learned fluent English in Florida in a high school exchange, studied international law at the London School of Economics, and advocates (surprise, surprise) a strong partnership with the Biden administration to save the climate and the world in general.

Baerbock is a perfect product of transatlantic leader selection. In between jumping up and down on the trampoline, her professional interest has always been international relations from an Anglo-American angle, including her masters degree in international law at the LSE in London.

Her initiation into transatlantic governance includes membership in the German Marshall Fund, the World Economic Forum’s Young Leaders Program and the Europe/Transatlantic Board of the Green Party’s Heinrich Böll Foundation.

On that basis, she has risen rapidly to the leadership of the Green Party, with very little political and no administrative experience.

Baerbock is all for “humanitarian intervention.” The Greens thus propose changing United Nations rules to make it possible to bypass the Great Power veto (held by the U.S., Russia, China, the U.K. and France) in order to use military intervention to “stop genocide.” Her enthusiasm for R2P (the Responsibility to Protect, used so effectively in Libya to destroy the country) should resonate happily in a Biden administration where former U.S. ambassador to the UN Samantha Power is on the lookout for victims to rescue.

Needless to say, the Greens have not forgotten the environment, and see “climate neutrality” as the “great opportunity for Germany as an industrial location.” The development of “climate protection technologies” should “provide impetus for new investments.” Their program calls for creation of a “digital euro,” secure mobile “digital identities” and “digital administrative services.”

Indeed, the Green economic program sounds very much like the Great Reset advocated by the World Economic Forum at Davos, with a new economy centered on climate change, artificial intelligence and digitalization of everything. International capitalism needs innovation to stimulate productive investment, and climate change provides the incentive. As a World Economic Forum young leader, Baerbock has surely learned this lesson.[5]

On 13 June 2021, the Greens officially nominated Baerbock as the party's candidate for chancellor.[6]


 

Events Participated in

EventStartEndLocation(s)Description
Bundestag/Members who proposed mandatory Covid jabIn 2022, these members of the Bundestag voted to make Covid jabs mandatory in Germany, to be enforced with punitive fines. The proposal failed.
Munich Security Conference/201915 February 201917 February 2019Germany
Munich
Bavaria
The 55th Munich Security Conference, which included "A Spreading Plague" aimed at "identifying gaps and making recommendations to improve the global system for responding to deliberate, high consequence biological events."
Munich Security Conference/202014 February 202016 February 2020Germany
Munich
Bavaria
The 56th Munich Security Conference, in 2020, "welcomed an unprecedented number of high-ranking international decision-makers."
Munich Security Conference/202218 February 202220 February 2022Germany
Munich
Bavaria
Slightly less than 1/3 of the 664 of the participants have pages here
Munich Security Conference/202317 February 202319 February 2023Germany
Munich
Bavaria
Annual conference of mid-level functionaries from the military-industrial complex - politicians, propagandists and lobbyists. The real decisions are made by deep politicians behind the scenes, elsewhere.
Munich Security Conference/202416 February 202418 February 2024Germany
Munich
Bavaria
Annual conference of mid-level functionaries from the military-industrial complex - politicians, propagandists and lobbyists - in their own bubble, far from the concerns of their subjects


Rating

5star.png 11 November 2021 Terje 
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References