From the DW:
“Mentally disabled Germans can vote in time for EU elections”
Germany's high court has
accelerated the enfranchisement of tens of thousands of adults with
intellectual disabilities, allowing them to vote next month in the EU
parliamentary election. More than 80,000 intellectually and mentally disabled
German adults gained the right to vote and will be able to cast their first
ballot in this year's European elections. The enfranchisement came from an
urgent motion ruling by the German Constitutional Court on Monday. It applies
to individuals with a court-ordered guardian, which helps with all areas of
their life due to a mental or intellectual impairment. But also included are
people convicted of offenses that were found incapable of criminal
responsibility and have been placed in a psychiatric clinic as a result. Germany's
opposition parties in parliament, the Greens, Left and the liberal FDP, had all
backed the legal challenge to grant people with intellectual and mental
disability the right to vote. In January, the high court announced that
existing rules that excluded intellectually disabled people outright from
exercising their right to vote was unconstitutional. Following the ruling,
Germany's Bundestag introduced legislation in March, but the ruling grand
coalition of Chancellor Angela Merkel's Christian Democrats, sister party
Christian Social Union, and junior partner Social Democrats stopped short of
enacting the change. At issue was a disagreement on whether or not the
enfranchisement should go into effect in time for the European elections on May
26. Verena Bentele, the president of the social welfare association VdK
Germany, was among the critics of the grand coalition's stance. "There
cannot be bureaucratic hurdles when it comes to safeguarding fundamental
rights," she said before Monday's ruling. The assistance organization
"Lebenshilfe" celebrated the ruling. "This is another great
success for the disabled and for democracy in Germany. Finally there is an end
to discrimination in electoral law."
^ Hopefully this decision can
change German society for the better and move towards an official policy of
discriminating against the disabled to one of seeing the disabled as the people
they are. ^
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