Silvia Breher
Silvia Maria Breher (nee Lucke; born 23 July 1973 in Löningen, Germany) is a German lawyer and politician (CDU). She has been a member of the German Bundestag since the 2017 federal elections and has been deputy party leader of the CDU since the end of November 2019.[1]
Political positions
In 2017, Breher advocated same-sex marriage.[2]
In 2023 she spoke a word of greeting on the Worldwide Day of Genital Autonomy, in which she spoke out clearly in favor of protecting all children from genital mutilation.
“ | My name is Silvia Breher. I am the family policy spokeswoman for the CDU/CSU parliamentary group - and I am a mother of three children.
Every human being, every child, has the right to physical integrity. Regardless of age, origin, religion or tradition. Non-medical interventions, including genital cutting, violate the right to physical integrity. In Germany, too, many women and girls are affected. And I thank all the initiators of this day for drawing attention to this topic. Because it is the task of all of us as adults, as politicians and as a society, to stand up against it.– Silvia Breher (7 May 2023). WWDOGA 2023 - Livestream. Retrieved 8 May 2023. |
When asked by Ulf Dunkel whether she really meant all children and not just girls and women, she confirmed:
“ | Of course, I am committed to the physical integrity of EVERYONE, especially children must be under our special protection and gender is completely irrelevant. I'm sorry that I accidentally didn't name the boys again at the end, but that says nothing about my attitude, which I formulated very clearly at the beginning of the video. Anyone who knows me and my work doesn't question that at all. – Silvia Breher (8 May 2023) (Facebook Messenger) |
External links
- Official website. Retrieved 8 May 2023
- Wikipedia article: Silvia Breher. Retrieved 8 May 2023.
References
- ↑ (22 November 2019)."CDU: Silvia Breher auf Parteitag zur neuen Vizevorsitzenden gewählt" [CDU: Silvia Breher elected new vice-chairman at party conference] (German), Spiegel Online. Retrieved 22 November 2019.
- ↑ (September 2017).
Kirche+Leben: Silvia Breher – Vom Ambo in den Bundestag
[Church+Life: Silvia Breher – From the Ambo to the Bundestag] (German).