Sevim Dağdelen (born 4 September 1975) is a German politician and a member of the Bundestag. She was elected for Left Party (die Linke) and switched in October 2023 to Bündnis Sahra Wagenknecht.
She worked for the left-wing Turkish newspaper Evrensel and German publications Tatsachen and Junge Stimme and has continued membership in the worker unions.[4]
Career
After joining the Left Party, Dağdelen became a member of the regional-level party council of North Rhine-Westphalia and the federal student agency from 1996 to 1998. From 1993 to 2001, she was a member of the federal youth commission. Since 2005, she has been a member of the German Bundestag.[5]
Dağdelen visited Julian Assange at the Embassy of Ecuador in the United Kingdom in September 2012, passing on to him "solidarity ... from the left in Germany and the online community in Germany".[7]
She is known to be a supporter of the Kurdish People's Protection Units (YPG). She showed the flag of the YPG in the Bundestag which is forbidden in Germany.[8] She also opposes the German foreign policy regarding Turkey that attacked the YPG in Afrin. Her appearance at a regional IG Metall congress in 2018 led to a lot of controversy. Turks started a social media campaign to end their membership in the YPG workers union.[9]
Sahra Wagenknecht presented her new party, BSW, during a press conference on 23 October 2023. Dağdelen is one of the MPs who left The Left and joined Wagenknecht's party. It was announced the same day.
Dağdelen published a new book, titled NATO: A Reckoning with the Atlantic Alliance, in July 2024, discussing it with Amy Goodman of Democracy Now! on July 10th.
Political positions
In February 2022, Dağdelen said Russia had no interest in an invasion of Ukraine and was concerned with its legitimate security interests. She also called for a neutral status for Ukraine. On 18 February 2022, she appeared at a demonstration in Berlin with the slogan "Security for Russia is security for our country". She accused the German media of spreading the "tall tales of the U.S. intelligence service".[10] After the Russian invasion occurred, Dağdelen was among the co-signers of a statement attributing significant responsibility for the Russian invasion to the United States.[11] In April 2022, she praised German protesters who opposed an increase in German military spending, and she described it as "madness" to deliver military weapons to Ukraine.[12]
Dağdelen criticized European Union commission president Ursula von der Leyen's speech in early 2023 that called for a new EU policy towards China, saying that "the EU and its member states want to challenge the emerging power China, including military means."[13]
Published works
NATO: A Reckoning with the Atlantic Alliance (2024)[14]