By The Associated Press
09.29.2009 10:06am EDT
(Berlin) Guido Westerwelle and his
gay partner are Germany’s new “power couple” – at least according to the
nation’s leading daily, which splashed a photo of the pair hugging on election
night on the front-page above the fold in Tuesday’s paper.
“His man makes him so strong,”
Bild wrote about Westerwelle, declaring that his 42-year-old partner Michael
Mronz was not only his most important adviser during the campaign, but also
“gives him security and … supports him when he suffers a setback.” Despite eight years as leader of
the pro-business Free Democrats, Westerwelle’s homosexuality has generated
relatively little discussion. But with his party set to become kingmaker to
Chancellor Merkel’s conservatives and him foreign minister, it has been thrust
into the spotlight. On Monday, a local official had to
apologize for an anti-gay remark he made about Westerwelle on election night.
Peter Langner, the city treasurer of the western city of Duisburg and a Social
Democrat, had said that “I don’t want a gay foreign minister.” Germans have been generally
tolerant of openly gay politicians and others have paved the way, including
Berlin Mayor Klaus Wowereit, who already declared back in 2001 that “I’m gay,
and it’s good that way.” While Westerwelle’s certainly no
gay activist, he has said before that his lifestyle may be “encouraging for
some young gays.” “I can only tell all young gays
and lesbians to not be disheartened, if not everything goes their way,”
Westerwelle told the Berlin’s gay magazine Siegessaeule this month. “This
society is changing for the good in the direction of tolerance and respect …
though slower than I would wish.” Westerwelle has been known to be
gay since 2004, when he brought his partner to Merkel’s 50th birthday party. “I’ve never been hiding my life,”
Westerwelle said back then. “I just lived it.” Mronz, who met Westerwelle in 2003
according to Bild, is an event manager who also organized the athletic world
championship in Berlin this summer. He recently joined the Free Democrats,
saying that after having listened to 120 speeches of his partner, “I am
completely convinced.” Westerwelle, who has led the Free
Democrats since 2001, also spoke out for stronger civil rights during the
election campaign and has criticized in the past that German law does not give
complete adoption rights to gay couples. The Lesbian and Gay Association in
Germany welcomed Westerwelle’s victory and hoped his election would become a
motor for gay rights in Germany. “We think it’s awesome that it has
become so normal that an openly gay man becomes foreign minister,” said Klaus
Jetz, the head of the association, adding that the gay community expected him
to advocate gay rights in Germany and abroad as well. “It’s important that as foreign
minister he will openly talk about human rights and the persecution of gays and
lesbians in other countries.” See also: Gay politician makes headlines in German.htm