At the precise stroke of midnight, the map of Switzerland was irrevocably redrawn. In a moment of supreme political theater, the town of Moutier and its 7,300 residents severed their ties with Canton Bern, officially integrating into Canton Jura. This is not merely an administrative shuffle; it is the shattering of a status quo that has held for decades. As the clock struck, the town did not just change jurisdictionsâit reclaimed what Mayor Marcel Winistoerfer calls its "natural home."
The atmosphere was nothing short of electric. While the rest of the country quietly ushered in the new year, Moutier was witnessing the culmination of a fierce, generational struggle. The transition marks the end of a saga fraught with legal battles, annulled votes, and deep-seated identity politics. For the pro-Jura majority, this is the ultimate vindication. The Swiss Interior Minister, Elisabeth Baume-Schneider, herself a Jurassian, witnessed the historic shift firsthand, underscoring the national magnitude of this territorial realignment.