Juliane Nagel

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Juliane Nagel (2019)

Juliane Rahel Nagel (born September 19, 1978 in Leipzig ) is a German politician ( Die Linke ) and has been a member of the Saxon state parliament since 2014 .

Life

Juliane Nagel attended a grammar school in Leipzig and passed her Abitur there in 1997. In addition to her professional activity, she studies political science at the University of Leipzig . She is also active as a journalist. Nagel lives in Leipzig.

politics

In 1999, Nagel joined the PDS . She initially worked in the linXXnet delegates and projects office in Leipzig. After Nagel was elected to the Leipzig City Council for the first time in 1999, but had to give up the office in 2001 after an alcohol trip , she was re-elected to the Leipzig City Council in 2009, 2014 and 2019. In the 2014 and 2019 local elections, it received the most votes in the city among candidates for the local elections. Nagel is the spokesperson for child and youth policy as well as migration policy for her group. She was also a research assistant for MEP Cornelia Ernst (Die Linke).

In the state election in Saxony on August 31, 2014, Nagel won the only direct mandate for her party in constituency 28 (Leipzig 2 / South) with 28.3% (against Robert Clemen , CDU ) and thus moved into the Saxon state parliament. She is the spokesperson for migration and refugee policy as well as for housing policy in the left-wing parliamentary group in the Saxon state parliament. She is also a deputy member of the Interior Committee and the Constitutional and Legal Committee. Nagel is considered to be the "mouthpiece and networker" of the left scene in Leipzig-Connewitz. In the state elections in Saxony on September 1, 2019, Nagel also succeeded in moving into the Saxon state parliament with 27.4% of the votes via the direct mandate of the Leipzig 2 constituency.

In 1999, Nagel and other PDS members founded the linXXnet office in Leipzig- Connewitz .

Juliane Nagel is, among other things, a member of verdi , the Leipzig radio association and the Rote Hilfe . From 2009 to 2014, Nagel was the spokesperson for the “Leipzig takes place” network. In 2013 she received the Leipzig Peace Prize and the Lysistrata Women's Peace Prize for her diverse commitment against neo-Nazism and discrimination .

In January 2020, Nagel came under fire for statements about a controversial police operation in the course of disputes at the turn of the year 2019/2020 in the Leipzig district of Connewitz and became the target of threats. Although it later emerged that this criticism was based on a one-sided representation of the events by the police, Nagel partially distanced himself from her statements.

Web links

Commons : Juliane Nagel  - Collection of Images

Individual evidence

  1. a b c autobiography on their website
  2. Juliane Nagel. In: herzkampf.de. Retrieved October 24, 2018 .
  3. Anika Kreller: Juliane Nagel: She wants: to change the world . In: The time . April 19, 2015, ISSN  0044-2070 ( zeit.de [accessed April 16, 2019]).
  4. [1]  ( Page no longer available , search in web archivesInfo: The link was automatically marked as defective. Please check the link according to the instructions and then remove this notice.@1@ 2Template: Dead Link / www.lvz-online.de  
  5. Juliane Nagel (left) is Leipzig's most popular local politician. Retrieved December 5, 2019 .
  6. ^ SPIEGEL TV GmbH: Left-wing extremists in Leipzig | mirror TV. Retrieved May 27, 2019 . , Running time 5:15
  7. WORLD: Juliane Nagel takes another direct mandate for leftists . September 1, 2019 ( welt.de [accessed September 1, 2019]).
  8. State election in Saxony 2019: Results of the Leipzig 2 constituency , Wahl.tagesschau.de, accessed September 2, 2019
  9. Oliver D'Antonio: Between town hall, milieu and network: About the local anchoring of political parties, Wiesbaden 2014, p. 159f.
  10. Anika Kreller: Juliane Nagel: Is this woman really that dangerous? zeit.de , April 17, 2015, accessed on January 3, 2020 .
  11. Left City Councilor Nagel receives peace prize - announced protests have not materialized. In: lvz.de. September 1, 2013, accessed March 9, 2016 .
  12. Left in Saxony awards peace prize. In: bild.de. September 1, 2013, accessed March 9, 2016 .
  13. Daniel Wüstenberg: Leipzig police revised representation of injured officer - further questions unanswered. In: stern.de . January 3, 2020, accessed January 17, 2020 .
  14. LVZ / dpa: Left-wing politician Juliane Nagel wants to report after threats. In: lvz.de. January 18, 2020, accessed January 18, 2020 .
  15. A lot, a lot of police. In: sueddeutsche.de . Retrieved January 16, 2020 .
  16. Left- wing radicalism: "You have to see violence in context". In: zeit.de . January 15, 2020, accessed January 17, 2020 .
  17. Lars Wienand, Jerome Baldowski: In Leipzig-Connewitz there was more unconscious. In: t-online.de. January 12, 2020, accessed January 17, 2020 .