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Weimer criticized for halting library construction

Weimer criticized for halting library construction
Minister of State for Culture Wolfram Weimer (archive photo). / Photo: Fabian Sommer/dpa
From: DieSachsen News
In addition to the debate about the bookstore prize, Weimer's decision against an extension to the German National Library is causing a headwind. What it's all about and how his house argues.

A few days before the start of the Leipzig Book Fair, Minister of State for Culture Wolfram Weimer is attracting further criticism. In addition to the debate about the German Bookstore Prize, the Commissioner for Culture and the Media (BKM) is causing outrage with the decision that the German National Library in Leipzig will not be getting a fifth extension for the time being.

"Every day a piece of bad cultural policy news from the Federal Chancellery," said Olaf Zimmermann, Managing Director of the German Cultural Council, referring to the German National Library.

The library had announced that Weimer had decided against the realization of the planned extension. This was intended to create long-term space to collect and store books and other media. The storage capacity in Leipzig is almost exhausted. Around seven million euros had already been invested in the planning.

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Weimer wants to collect digitally

A spokesperson for the Minister of State for Culture confirmed that the new building will not be built for the time being. The plans have been suspended due to the uncertain federal budget situation. A final decision is still pending. "In principle, Minister of State Weimer is aiming to make the mandatory delivery to the German National Library as digital as possible in the future."

According to the law, publishers currently have to deliver two physical copies to the library. Weimer is committed to ensuring that in future there will only be one copy - and if possible, only digitally. This would contribute to reducing bureaucracy.

The German National Library recently provided an update on the planning status of the planned extension. Although the costs have been significantly reduced once again, they still amount to 100 million euros.

Zimmermann described the reasoning "that the collection of physical media works is no longer up to date" as "highly worrying". "In the past, the physical preservation of cultural assets was particularly important to conservatives, what does conservative cultural policy stand for today?"

The German Library Association criticized that the proposal put forward by the BKM to focus more on the digital collection ignored the current legal basis. Such a fundamental change to the collection's mission should be properly examined by experts beforehand and not be made a "dependent variable of a structural measure".

Debate over procedure for German Bookstore Prize

Weimer had also recently sparked debate with the German Bookstore Prize. He had three left-wing bookshops in Berlin, Bremen and Göttingen removed from the prize list and justified this with "findings relevant to the protection of the constitution". A jury had selected the prize winners. Following this, there were calls for Weimer's resignation from the opposition, which the federal government rejected. He was accused of interfering with artistic freedom and acting dishonestly.

Weimer argued that the prize, which is financed with taxpayers' money, should not go to "enemies of the state". Following protests against the decision, he had the award ceremony planned for March 19 at the Leipzig Book Fair canceled. The award-winning bookshops are to receive the prize money and certificate directly.

Constitutional protection involved in another case

The dispute is also about the question of whether and how state-funded projects should be investigated by the Office for the Protection of the Constitution using the so-called Haber procedure. This refers to a review of state-funded projects by the Office for the Protection of the Constitution that was decreed in 2004 and later named after Emily Haber - a state secretary in the Federal Ministry of the Interior.

Weimer applied this procedure once again - in addition to the three bookshops - according to a response to a written question from Green politician Sven Lehmann, who is chairman of the Bundestag's Culture Committee.

The BKM's response states: "The Federal Government Commissioner for Culture and the Media has applied the Haber procedure in a total of four individual cases during this legislative period, three of which were in connection with the awarding of the German Bookstore Prize 2025. Further information cannot be provided due to confidentiality." It is therefore unclear in which other cases the procedure was used. It is also not yet known what the three excluded bookshops are accused of.

Lehmann spoke of a "creeping dismantling of the fundamental right to artistic freedom". This approach creates "a climate of fear and mistrust and is no different from authoritarian states".

"Wolfram Weimer is absolutely right"

The Minister of State for Culture, on the other hand, received support from the CDU/CSU. "It goes without saying that enemies of the constitution are not supported or honored with taxpayers' money," wrote Ottilie Klein (CDU), cultural policy spokesperson for the CDU/CSU parliamentary group, on Platform X. A defensive democracy is clearly opposed to any form of extremism. If "anti-constitutional institutions" do not receive tax-funded prizes, that is not the end of artistic freedom.

Gitta Connemann (CDU), Parliamentary State Secretary in the Ministry of Economic Affairs, expressed a similar view. "'Germany die please' on the facade - and then complain about the lack of 'state money'. Remarkable logic," she wrote on X. "Anyone who despises this country has no right to its funding. Wolfram Weimer is absolutely right." The words "Deutschland verrecke bitte" can be read on the awning of the Bremen bookshop "Golden Shop".

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