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German election: a clear rejection of right-wing policies
By Peter Schwarz
20 September 2005
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The result of the election for the German parliament (Bundestag)
on Sunday can be interpreted in only one way: policies based on
welfare cuts and the re-division of social wealth to benefit the
rich have met with bitter resistance from the German population
and been vigorously rejected.
Federal Chancellor Gerhard Schröder had arranged the early
election in order to create a stable parliamentary majority for
the implementation of his thoroughly unpopular program of welfare
cutsthe Agenda 2010. To this end, he received support from
all of the parties represented in the Bundestag, from the German
president, the Federal Constitutional Court and the entire economic
and political elite.
The governing Social Democratic Party (SPD)-Green Party coalition
was to receive a new mandate and critics of government policy
from inside the ruling parties were to be silenced, or power would
be handed over to the conservative opposition, consisting of the
Christian Democratic Union (CDU) and Christian Social Union (CSU),
and the free market Free Democratic Party (FDP).
Now just the opposite has occurred. The election result has
resulted in a parliamentary majority which is even more precarious,
and has made clear that the prevailing policy of free market
reforms is rejected by the majority of the population. Political
crises as well as violent social conflicts are the inevitable
outcome.
This was already foreshadowed on the evening of the election
whenfor the first time in the history of the German Federal
Republictwo candidates, Angela Merkel (CDU) and the incumbent
chancellor, Schröder (SPD), both claimed victory and both
said they were determined to assume the post of chancellor in
the new government.
When polling stations closed on Sunday at 6 p.m. and the first
prognoses were published, the result came as a shock to representatives
of the CDU/CSU as well as to professional public opinion analysts.
The Union parties, which were set to win well over
40 percent according to all polls taken prior to the vote, received
just 35 percent. This figure was confirmed in the course of the
evening. The Union parties supposedly impregnable advantage
over the SPD22 percent points in the middle of Junehad
shrunk to just one percent.
The SPD fared better than it itself had expected just a few
weeks ago. Nevertheless, the party was the clear loser in the
election, its vote declining more than 4 percent compared to the
Bundestag election three years previously. It obtained a bit less
than 34 percent, one of the worst results in its history. The
Greens suffered slight losses, receiving 8 percent of the vote.
The Union parties were unable to profit from the losses in
the government camp. The CDU lost 3 percent of its total compared
to the last election, while the CSU, which is based in Bavaria
and runs candidates only in that state, lost as much as 10 percent.
For the first time in Germanys post-war history, the two
so-called peoples parties, the SPD and the Union,
polled a combined vote of less than 70 percent.
With just 10 percent, the FDP obtained one of its best ever
results. It received many so-called second ballot
votes from Union voters who sought to prevent a grand coalition
of the SPD and CDU. Nevertheless, the combined vote for the Union
and FDP was less than their total at the last Bundestag election,
when they only narrowly failed to poll more than the SPD-Green
camp. Tipped as sure winners of the election, the Union and FDP
only polled 45 percent of the vote.
The party that registered the biggest increase in support was
the recently formed Left Party. In 2002, the Party of Democratic
Socialism (PDSsuccessor party to the Stalinist ruling party
of the former East Germany) failed to gain the five percent minimum
necessary under German electoral law for admission to parliament.
Now standing as the Left Party (following a fusion with the West
German-based Election Alternative group) its candidates more than
doubled their vote to nearly nine percent, and the merged party
will control a significant fraction of deputies in the new parliament.
In the former East Germany, where the PDS had its main base
of support, the Left Party received 27 percenton a level
with the vote for the CDUwhile the SPD won the largest share
of the vote, with 33 percent. In the states of former West Germany,
the Left Party won slightly less than five percent of the vote.
All in all, the election result indicates a clear shift to
the left within the electorate. The Union and FDP notched up just
45 percent, compared to 51 percent for the governing parties plus
the Left Party. The remaining 4 percent of the vote was divided
amongst smaller parties which will not be represented in the Bundestag.
This shift to the left became increasingly evident as social
questions moved to the center of the election debate. Initially,
the Union had been able to profit from popular discontent with
the Schröder government, but its own ratings sank when the
public became clearer about what the Union itself was proposing
in terms of social policy.
In particular, the Union lost a huge amount of support in the
wake of public debate on the radical right-wing tax plans proposed
by Paul Kirchhof, who was brought by Merkel onto her campaign
team as her expert on financial policy. At the same time, the
SPD and the Greens began to talk left. While they
had originally presented themselves as hard-line reformers,
towards the end of the election campaign they shifted their tactics
and posed as defenders of the welfare state.
An additional factor was the hurricane disaster in New Orleans.
The complete failure of the Bush administration in the face of
a natural catastrophe which had long been forecast, and the way
in which hundred of thousands of poor people were left to their
fate, made clear to many voters the consequences of policies that
subordinate all social needs to the market and corporate profit-making.
It would, however, be entirely mistaken to think that the government
which eventually emerges from these elections will respond to
the concerns and needs of the voters. On the contrary, it will
move even further to the right.
Discussion had already begun on the evening of the election
on the mechanism for arriving at a stable government which will
be able to continue the dismantling of the German social welfare
system. This was the basis for the assertion by Schröder
that he should remain chancellor.
Nobody apart from me is able to construct a stable government,
he declared in a television debate on the evening of the election.
The issue was, he said, to ensure that reform processes
start to move in Germany without endangering social harmony.
In other words, Schröder is claiming that only he can implement
further reforms without unleashing open social conflict.
He excluded any form of cooperation with the Left Party, which
could theoretically assist the SPD and Greens in establishing
a majority. A so-called traffic light coalition comprising
the SPD, the Greens and the FDP, which would also have a majority,
has been categorically rejected by the FDP chairman, Guido Westerwelle.
The only remaining alternative is a grand coalition under Schröders
leadership. Angela Merkel angrily rejected such a demand, and
persisted in stressing that as the largest parliamentary grouping,
the Union had the right to determine the chancellor of a grand
coalition. At the same time, prominent representatives of big
business are insisting that a government has to be assembled as
rapidly as possible.
The spokesman for the Retail Trade Federation, Hubertus Pellengahr,
demanded that the parties unite to find a solution and form an
effective government as quickly as possible. Anything else
promises uncertainty, and uncertainty is always the worst condition
for an economic upswing.
BDI President Jürgen Thumann said of the election result:
From the standpoint of industry and business, we are bitterly
disappointed. He warned that Germany would be more difficult
to govern. He appealed to the Union and SPD to be conscious of
their great responsibility and do everything necessary
to get reforms moving.
A further possible coalition that is being discussed is an
alliance of the Union, the FDP and the Greens. Prominent representatives
of the Greens have declared that such a coalition is hardly realistic,
but have also refrained from entirely excluding it. For its part,
the Left Party has declared that it does not intend to disturb
the plans of the other parties. It has no intention of mobilizing
its voters and opposing the formation of either a grand coalition
or another form of right-wing alliance.
Oskar Lafontaine, former SPD chairman and a leading candidate
of the Left Party, had already on several occasions during the
campaign endorsed a grand coalition. Following the vote, PDS Chairman
Lothar Bisky echoed Lafontaines words in a televised debate.
The Left Party would emerge as the victor from a grand coalition,
he said, and called such an outcome a lesser evil
to a Union-FPD government.
See Also:
German elections: Vote Socialist Equality
Party on September 18
[17 September 2005]
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