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Newly Elected Western Germany Mayor In Intensive Care After Stabbing Attack

Media reports said her son and daughter, aged 15 and 17, had been taken in for questioning while Stalzer was airlifted to hospital and was still in intensive care.
A police officer works at the scene after Herdecke's newly elected Mayor Iris Stalzer was found seriously injured in a stabbing incident, in Herdecke, Germany, October 7, 2025. REUTERS/Leon Kuegeler

A newly elected mayor in western Germany was hospitalized in critical condition on Tuesday after being found with multiple stab wounds, local authorities said.

Iris Stalzer, 57, dragged herself back into her house after being stabbed around midday, broadcaster WDR reported. Bild newspaper said she had stab wounds to her neck and abdomen.

Prosecutors and police said in a joint statement their inquiry was looking into every possibility and said: “Close family involvement cannot be ruled out at the present time.”

DPA news agency reported that her son and daughter, aged 15 and 17, had been taken in for questioning. Stalzer was airlifted to hospital and was still in intensive care, the authorities’ statement said.

Bild cited investigators saying her son had told police his mother had been attacked by several men.

The police and prosecution statement did not address the content of the media reports.

The attack comes after a region-wide election campaign that politicians in North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany’s largest state, said was distinguished by the viciousness and rawness of its tone.

Stalzer, a Social Democrat, is due to take office in November after being elected mayor of Herdecke in the Ruhr region.

Police searching for evidence sealed off the road around the house of the labour lawyer, who has for years been a fixture of local politics in Herdecke, a historic town of 20,000 people. She ousted a conservative mayor with the backing of the Greens.

Conservative Chancellor Friedrich Merz called for a swift investigation.

Violence Against Politicians

A study published in May found 60% of politicians in Germany had experienced violence at least once, with one in five saying it had made them more reluctant to appear in public.

Even though the motive was unclear, the case raised memories of the 2019 murder of conservative local government president Walter Luebcke, a supporter of then chancellor Angela Merkel’s refugee policy, who was shot by a far-right activist as he smoked a late-night cigarette on his terrace at home.

Four years before that, Henriette Reker was stabbed by a right-wing extremist the day before she was elected mayor of Cologne. She made a full recovery and is due to leave office later this year.

(With inputs from Reuters)

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