Gerhard Schröder: Majority for mediation attempts by the former chancellor

After stern interview
Gas and Ukraine war: Majority wants Gerhard Schröder to mediate

Vladimir Putin (left) and Gerhard Schröder in September 2005

© Yuri Kadobnov / AFP

Should Gerhard Schröder use his contacts in the Kremlin to mediate in the Ukraine war and gas supplies? A majority of respondents to a survey by star and RTL/ntv is for it.

A slim majority of people in Germany believe that former Chancellor Gerhard Schröder should use his contacts in Russia to mediate in the Ukraine conflict and in the delivery of Russian gas to Europe. 57 percent of respondents to a representative Forsa survey commissioned by star and RTL/ntv answer the corresponding question with “yes”. 36 percent disagree.

However, very few of those surveyed (22 percent) believe that Schröder could influence Russia’s President Vladimir Putin in the event of possible mediation attempts. 64 percent think this is out of the question.

49 percent of the SPD supporters for the exclusion of Gerhard Schröder

Background is an exclusive interview by star and RTL/ntv with the former chancellor, which was published this Wednesday and also in print tomorrow, Thursday star will be read. In the conversation, the 78-year-old describes that he met Vladimir Putin in Moscow last week and talked about Germany’s energy supply, among other things. The Russian president and the former chancellor are considered confidants and also spoke to each other shortly after Russia’s attack on the neighboring country.

Another result of the survey: 49 percent of SPD supporters are in favor of excluding the former chairman from the party, 39 percent consider such a step to be wrong (total: 48 percent in favor, 37 percent against).

In the interview, Schröder advocates the commissioning of the Nord Stream 2 gas pipeline in order to be able to supply gas to Germany. “If things get really tight, there’s this pipeline,” says Schröder. The connection was not put into operation after completion due to sanctions in Russia. According to reports, the tubes already contain 177 million cubic meters of gas. 66 percent of those surveyed are in favor of capturing and using the existing gas, provided this is legally and environmentally possible. A quarter are against.

Forsa interviewed a total of 1012 people this Wednesday for the opinion. The statistical error tolerance is three percentage points. 100 percent missing information = “don’t know”.

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