Before a meeting of the business associations with Minister of Economic Affairs Peter Altmaier, there is great concern that easing will be a long way off.
The discussion about tightening epidemic policy is causing a depressive mood among hundreds of thousands of companies and self-employed people in Germany. Regardless of whether you are an innkeeper, hotel manager, fitness studio operator or shopkeeper – normality is far away for all of them. And it could move even further if the North Rhine-Westphalian Prime Minister is Armin Laschet and Chancellor Angela Merkel (both CDU) and shut down the country even more than before. That is the starting point for a meeting of numerous business associations with the responsible minister Peter Altmaier (CDU) on Thursday.
“We finally need political solutions that with and despite Corona Guarantee a maximum of public life, leisure and mobility ”, demanded the President of the Tourism Association, Michael Frenzel, in an interview with our editorial team. He has careful openings in his eye – for vaccinated people or with a negative corona test.
But the model tests in Saarland and in Lower Saxony Laschet, Merkel and CSU boss Markus Söder consider the virus mutation and more infections to be too risky. The sectors affected by the closure cannot come close to the proponents of sealing and have to be content with complaining to Altmaier of their suffering.
Travel industry calls for extended crisis aid
The Minister of Economic Affairs honestly tries to help the corona losers, but has little to say about corona politics. Therefore, at the previous round in mid-February, the associations urged him to get a meeting with the Chancellor. But they didn’t get it. So they have to direct their demands back to Altmaier, who will pass them on to the head of government. This also includes more financial support from the state if business has to rest longer. “We are calling for the bridging aid to be extended beyond June 30,” said Frenzel. Because it is foreseeable “that it will take a while until we can get back to a more or less normal business in the tourism industry”.