Scandal in the Vienna kindergarten: Toddlers under transgender pressure!
Two children were fired from the ORF company kindergarten in Vienna due to critical parents. FPÖ leader Nepp demands consequences.

Scandal in the Vienna kindergarten: Toddlers under transgender pressure!
Shocking incidents are causing a stir in the ORF company kindergarten in Vienna: two small children, aged one and four, were expelled from the facility because their parents found the program too critical. According to a report by Today The boys were confronted with nude figures that were on display in the kindergarten. These depictions show two men in various situations, including expressions such as “body, naked and naked”. The father of one of the affected children brought up the images, which ultimately resulted in the parents being fired. Dominik Nepp, head of the Vienna FPÖ, describes this approach as an “unbelievable scandal” and calls for clear consequences and the cancellation of all funding for kindergarten.
Language skills of first graders in Vienna are worrying
At the same time as this scandal, alarming educational statistics are coming to light: almost 45 percent of Vienna's first graders do not know enough German to follow lessons, according to a query sent to the office of Christoph Wiederkehr, City Councilor for Education. What is particularly worrying is that most of these children were born in Austria, which points to a failure in the education system, as the ÖVP and FPÖ note. While the number of children with language problems is increasing, Neos boss Beate Meinl-Reisinger is calling for a second compulsory year of kindergarten to improve this situation, reports The press.
In the Margareten district and other districts, the proportion of first graders who cannot speak German is even over 50 percent. The FPÖ also calls for mandatory language screening for all children from the age of four as well as sanctions for parents in order to increase language support. These urgent measures highlight the need for fundamental reform in the education system, which seems more urgent than ever.