Cancellation of a new attempt at mandatory corona vaccination in

Cancellation of a new attempt at mandatory corona vaccination in Germany – corona vaccination

Of . – 08/04/2022 13:53 (act 08/04/2022 13:53)

A possible new attempt to introduce mandatory vaccination against the crown in Germany was rejected by Scholz.

A possible new attempt to introduce mandatory vaccination against the crown in Germany was rejected by Scholz. ©REUTERS/Hannibal Hanschke (symbol image)

Is there a new attempt to introduce mandatory corona vaccination in Germany? Chancellor Olaf Scholz (SPD) gave a rejection.

“There is no legislative majority in the Bundestag for compulsory vaccination,” he said late on Thursday, after consultations with prime ministers in Berlin. This is now the “starting point for our actions”, however much he regrets it.

Germany: Scholz rejects new attempt at mandatory vaccination against coronavirus

Health Minister Karl Lauterbach (SPD) now wants to start a new vaccination campaign. “We must once again direct a really effective vaccination campaign to those who have not yet been vaccinated but are in principle ready,” Lauterbach said Friday in Deutschlandfunk. You know there is such a group, especially people with a migratory background. “They have to be achieved, we must not give up. In fact, we also have to advertise more creatively. We are preparing something now.”

A majority of the German Bundestag voted against mandatory vaccination against the crown

The Bundestag voted against mandatory vaccination from age 60 on Thursday. Lauterbach therefore no longer sees the possibility of further easing. “We’ve done the loosening that can be done, but we’re at the end of the road,” he said. “If we had managed to make vaccination mandatory, there would have been a lot more room for relaxation in the fall. I now see that the Infection Protection Act will likely have to be amended again in early fall.”

He was “clearly disappointed that there is no majority today, I don’t want to hide that in any way,” Chancellor Scholz said. “I’m still convinced that it would be okay if we had a vaccination certificate in Germany.” With the Bundestag’s decision, however, a “very clear statement by the legislature” was made. “We will do everything we can to convince even more citizens of this country to be vaccinated,” Scholz announced. This will “take our creativity to completion”.

Position on mandatory corona vaccination from the age of 60 in Germany

The obligation to vaccinate from the age of 60 was supported above all by SPD and Green MPs, including Scholz and Lauterbach themselves. is not abandoned, until then to achieve mandatory vaccination anyway.” Scholz obviously sees things differently. He considers the Bundestag’s decision “too clear”, the chancellor said. “And it wouldn’t be very democratic to pretend it was a accident or something.”

Lauterbach now also wants to refocus on toughening the Infection Protection Act: “I now see that we have to face infection protection again,” he told Deutschlandfunk. The traffic light coalition has just relaxed the Infection Protection Act. The short catalog of measures for states and municipalities is valid until September 23. This time you have to think of another change from the start, demanded Lauterbach. He sees the need to expand the toolbox again in the fall. Justice Minister Marco Buschmann of the FDP, responsible for the legal review, said that at the moment this is not possible. The pressure will build again in the fall, especially as there will still be a vaccination gap without mandatory vaccinations.

Failure of mandatory vaccination against the crown in the German Bundestag

The failure of mandatory vaccination in the Bundestag is sad news, especially for the seriously ill. As the current Infection Protection Act expires on September 23, an amendment is on the agenda anyway, Lauterbach added Friday in Berlin. “In the fall, we probably won’t be ready for the expected wave for the third time,” complained Lauterbach. “I think we will also go back to the mask requirement.”

For green health politician Janosch Dahmen, the vaccination requirement is out of the question for now. The decision in the Bundestag was clear, he says in the ZDF. “For me, the vaccination requirement is now marked in step one.” However, you always need to be ready to speak up as the pandemic continues and you now face even greater challenges without mandatory vaccination.