Germany’s outgoing left-globalist extremist Foreign Minister, Annalena Baerbock (Green Party), has been nominated by the country’s foreign office to assume the role of President of the United Nations General Assembly, a position Germany was set to hold next.
During her time in office, Baerbock, co-leader of the increasingly unpopular Green Party, has overseen a decline in Germany’s influence on the global stage, with consequences that may take decades to undo.
But since she’s loyal to the globalist agenda, Baerbock, much like the former Prime Minister of the Netherlands Mark Rutte—who was rejected by Dutch voters before taking on the role of NATO Secretary General— has been elevated to a prominent position within a globalist-led international organization.
She is set to be elected as the President of the United Nations General Assembly in early June, with her one-year term beginning in September, according to a report in the German newspaper Der Spiegel. Her election is widely regarded as a formality, following internal agreements within the United Nations.
“It would be strange to see the granddaughter of a Nazi proudly talking about her grandfather’s ‘heroic deeds’ occupying the presidency of the General Assembly 80 years after victory [in World War II],” remarked Russian Foreign Ministry spokesperson Maria Zakharova, as reported by the state news agency TASS.
Barebock’s Green Party now commands a mere 12% of the nationwide vote in Germany, behind the CDU, AfD, and outgoing Chancellor Olaf Scholz’s SPD.
No comments:
Post a Comment