It is not always easy to have a face that is known in the offentligeheden.

Laura Lindahl from the Liberal Alliance have often experienced the reverse side of the coin, when different people write nasty emails to her public address, but on Sunday evening she was still enough and decided that she would show her followers on the social media Twitter, what messages politicians can get. the

For Extra Magazine tells Laura Lindahl, why she chose to put the message on the web.

– I think it is important that we have spoken openly about the fact that the messages are part of the reality, she says.

the Politician says that she experiences on a weekly basis that people are writing nasty messages to her.

– It has become a part of the job, but I am very upset about the really serious messages, and they might well make me uncomfortable, she says.

In the lookup ask Laura Lindahl on the other of her colleagues have tried the same, and it can most answer yes to.

‘Laura – you are unfortunately not the only one. It is degrading. And deeply problematic’, writes Uffe Elbæk from the Alternative.

Sophie Carstensen from the radical write, that it is scary common.

Laura Lindahls partikammerat Joachim B. Olsen will also take part in the debate and believes that she must write the name of the person who has written to her.

‘Up with the name. The kind of idiots must be exhibited in public’, he writes.

But it has Laura Lindahl in no way desire to.

– I will not exhibit the sender, because I could actually be afraid that he would make me something, she says.

She believes that there is a big difference between her and Joachim B. Olsen.

Joachim is a big, strong man who would be able to defend themselves, so I can well understand that he would exhibit the name. As a woman, it just a more exposed position. If the guy that wrote would make me something I could not do anything, she says.

With the spread she hopes to put more focus on the problem. Just because one is a politician, one should not find themselves in that people write so nasty messages, she believes.

– We should not accept it here as a society. It is no matter who, who gets such a message. On the case of an officer or politician. We must insist on propriety and digital formation.

She is also open to sharing more of the nasty messages she receives as a politician.

– Yes, it is important to get it talked up, so that I could.

Laura Lindahl believes that to get more messages as a female politician, but points out that there may possibly be a crucial difference.

– the Tone is just different with women. I doubt there are very many, which calls for a man to raped, like they do with the women, she says.