Header Ads Widget

Ticker

6/recent/ticker-posts

Success of two Eunuchs in the German Federal Parliament

<img src="German elections.webp" alt="Success of two Eunuchs in the German Federal Parliament "/>


Two eunuch women politicians have also won seats in Germany's parliamentary elections on Sunday (September 26th).Both belong to the Green Party.

Germany General Election 

Germany held a general election on September 26 in which the environmentalist Green Party, with its best performance ever, won 14.8 percent of the vote.Making it the third most successful party in the next coalition government.Green party Will play an important role in the formation.One of the two Green Party eunuch politicians is from Nuremberg, in the southern German state of Bavaria.His name is Tessa Gansier and he is 44 years old while the other is 27 years old and his name is Naik Slavic.He is from the western province of North Rhine-Westphalia.

Eunuchs react to their success

 Speaking to Reuters, Tessa Ganser called it a "historic victory" not only for the Green Party but also for transgender and gay and rights groups.

According to him, his election victory is a proof that Germany is an open and tolerant society.Tessa Gansier was first elected to the Bavarian provincial parliament in 2013 and in 2018.She became the first transgender to serve on a committee of the federal parliament.

Tessa Ganser

"Crazy, I still can't believe it," Naik Slavic wrote in a message on Instagram, expressing his delight at winning a seat in the federal parliament in this election.The Slavs called for an action plan to eradicate "homophobia and transphobia" from German society.

Germany has previously had only one transgender member of parliament in the federal parliament.He was also an eunuch named Christian Schenck.

Is this a big deal in Germany?

Homosexuality was outlawed in the Federal Republic of Germany in 1969 and in 2017 gay marriage or transgender couples were legally allowed to marry.

However, there is a 40-year-old law in this Western society. Called the Transsexuals Act.It is possible to change the name and gender on an identity document following a court decision based on a psychiatrist's diagnosis and a judicial inquiry into sexual orientation and tendency.

Naik Slavic

Like many other transgender people in Germany, Tessa Gansier refused to change her name and gender on her identity documents because of the law and her former masculine name was on the ballot paper.

Meanwhile, Gabrielle Knox Keung, head of the press and public relations department at the Federal Trans Association of Germany, called the recent election a "historic moment" for transgender people.It will be easier for eunuchs to change their name on their identity document.

Post a Comment

0 Comments

close
close