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Germany: CDU woos the Greens in Hamburg state election
By Ulrich Rippert
28 February 2008
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With the announcement of the results of the election held in
Hamburg last Sunday, an intensive campaign has begun aimed at
securing the participation of the Greens in a state government
coalition to be headed by the conservative Christian Democratic
Union (CDU).
The CDU, which has governed this city-state for the past seven
years, now needs the Greens to secure a majority to continue in
power. Previously the CDU had a big enough majority to govern
alone. However, following the failure of the free-market Free
Democratic Party to win enough votes, the CDU is now dependent
on the Greens, which won 9.6 percent of the vote in Hamburg. The
CDU gained 42.6 percent of the vote. According to German electoral
law, parties require at 5 percent of the vote to take up seats
in parliaments. The FDP gained slightly less than the necessary
5 percent.
Leading figures in the Green Party on both a national and state
level are arguing for a government coalition with the CDU. It
would be the first such coalition at a state level and an important
precedent for future coalitions at a federal level. Those arguing
for such a coalition, however, have expressed themselves cautiously,
aware of the fact that there is considerable resistance to such
a move on the part of the Green Partys rank and file.
Another possible partner for the CDU in Hamburg is the Social
Democratic Party (SPD), which was able to slightly improve its
vote compared to the previous state election four years ago. However
the SPDs 34.1 percent still represents its second-worst
result ever in what was formerly one of the partys strongholdsthe
SPD had governed the city-state continually from 1946 to 2001.
There are fears, however, that the creation of a so-called
grand coalition of the SPD and CDU (paralleling the
ruling federal coalition) could strengthen the Left Party, which
won 6.5 percent of the vote and entered the state parliament in
Hamburg in its first attempt. Ten percent of working class voters
and nearly 20 percent of unemployed cast their ballots for the
Left Party. A coalition of the Left Party, the SPD and the Greens
could theoretically form a government in Hamburg, but such an
option has been vehemently ruled out by both the SPD and the Greens,
who both prefer a coalition with the CDU.
It is against this background that even conservative newspapers,
which 15 years ago regarded the Greens as a threat to democracy,
are now urging a CDU-Green coalition.
Even before the closing of the polling stations on Sunday,
the local Hamburg Morgenpost wrote of a clear signal
in the election for a pact between the CDU and the Greens. Under
conditions where the FDP lacked sufficient support, a coalition
between the CDU and the Greens is still better than another
grand coalition, which does everything to the letter.
The right-wing Die Welt was even more explicit, writing
that Hamburg is a citizens (bourgeois) city and voted
bourgeois. It is wrong to assume that there is a structural
majority for the left, they argue. One can only hope that
the CDU and GAL (Greens) in Hamburg finally dare to create the
first such coalition on a regional level. When, if not now?
Die Welt asks.
The liberal Frankfurt Rundschau assessed the election
as follows: It is the chance for black-green [black is the
colour traditionally associated with the CDU] and thus for new
coalition options far beyond this Hanseatic city. The Berlin-based
Tagespiegel urges the Greens in both Hamburg and the state
of Hesse to make up their minds and concludes: In both parliaments
they could assist in determining policy. In Wiesbaden (Hesse)
they could bring about the fall of Roland Koch (Hesse state prime
ministerCDU) and form a coalition with the SPD and FDP and
in Hamburg the neo-liberal Ole von Beust (CDU prime minister)
is certainly not a persona non grata.
A reaction to increasing popular opposition
The election in Hamburg confirms a development visible across
the country: the established political parties react to a clear
shift to the left by the population with their own emphatic lurch
to the right.
The Hamburg election has a great deal in common with the recent
election in the state of Hesse four weeks ago. In both states
the CDU lost its absolute majority and was unable to form a coalition
with its desired partnerthe FDPbecause of the lack
of votes for the latter. At the same time, the Left Party was
able to enter both state parliaments for the first time and now
has representation in a total of 10 of Germanys 16 statessix
in the east of the country and four in the west.
Both Hesse and Hamburg are former strongholds of the SPD. As
the SPD increasingly lost support due to its right-wing policies,
the Greens were first able to profit, but used their increased
influence in turn to assure the SPD stayed in power.
The rise of the CDU in both Hesse and Hamburg was linked to
the takeover of power at a federal level by the SPD and Greens
in 1998. The CDU in both states was able to divert increasing
disenchantment with the policies of the SPD-Green coalition into
support for right-wing populist campaigns.
In Hesse Roland Koch (CDU) won the election in 1999 with a
xenophobic campaign against dual nationality. In Hamburg this
role was played by the right-wing populist Party for a Constitutional
Offensive (PRO) led by the judge Roland Barnabas Schill.
The PRO won nearly a fifth of the vote on its first showing. At
that time Ole von Beust (CDU), who is today often presented as
a sort of socially liberal figure, set up a coalition with the
Schill party and the FDP.
Four years later Koch and Beust were once again able to profit
from discontent with the SPD-Green coalition and secure themselves
absolute majorities. In the meantime, the Schill party has dissolved
in a sea of squabbles and scandal.
It is notable that such right-wing extremists and their campaigns
played no significant role in the recent elections. Kochs
own attempt to repeat his xenophobic campaign of 1999 backfired
badly and cost him victory, and in Hamburg right-wing extremist
parties failed to win over 1 percent. The German Peoples
Union (DVU) obtained 0.8 percent and the party led by the former
Hamburg justice senator, Roger Kusch, gained just 0.5 percent.
Social polarization has reached new heights in the Hanseatic
city. Hamburg is not only home to one of Europes largest
ports, it is also the seat of major industries and businesses,
as well as some of the biggest publishing houses and media concerns
in Germany. Some of Europes wealthiest individuals reside
in the city. While there are more than 5,000 millionaires in Hamburg,
poverty is growing rapidly, with above average levels of unemployment
and homelessness. At the end of the 1990s it was estimated that
a total of 60,000 children in Hamburg were condemned to poverty.
Under these conditions the readiness of the Greens and SPD
to secure a majority for the CDU is indicative of a clear shift
to the right, directed against the increasing popular radicalisation
expressed in the election result.
The lurch to the right by the Greens
Less than a decade ago, the Greens took power at a federal
level alongside the SPD for the first time. At the time the party
posed as diehard pacifists opposed to all forms of militarism.
But shortly after assuming power, the party swept aside its pacifist
pretensions and played a leading role in ensuring the participation
of the German army in the NATO war against Yugoslavia.
This was followed by a string of policies that broke previous
Green Party taboos. Within a short period of time the Greens constituted
the right wing of the Schröder government, ensuring that
the SPD continued its anti-social policies in the face of large-scale
popular opposition.
However, the opportunism displayed by the party has reached
a new peak with its current overtures to work together with the
CDU. The head of the Green parliamentary fraction, Renate Künast,
declared she was in principle open for new coalitions.
What is clear is that SPD-Green is not our only option,
and the country should not be forced to accept grand coalitions
everywhere, Künast told the media. The door was now
wide open for other parties and the Greens had to exploit this
opportunity.
While Künast encourages the Greens to work with the CDU
in Hamburg, she rejects a coalition with the CDU in Hesse led
by Prime Minister Koch. The CDU in Hesse is not to be compared
with the party in Hamburg, she stressed, indicating that should
Koch step down the Greens could also change their mind in Hesse.
For her part, the Green European Union deputy Angelika Beer
told the press that a CDU-Green coalition in Hamburg could have
positive effects throughout Germany.
One of the main protagonists for cooperation with the CDU is
the leading candidate of the Green Party in Hamburg, Christa Goetsch.
Goetsch is a teacher of chemistry and biology who joined the Greens
in 1995 and then rose quickly in the local political hierarchy
to become spokeswoman for the Green parliamentary fraction in
2002.
From the start of her career, Goetsch opposed the left wing
that was quite pronounced within the Hamburg Greens. The Green
organisation in Hamburg (GAL) had been formed 30 years earlier
by a merger of two groups with a Maoist and Stalinist background.
In 1999 a group of Greens resigned from the parliamentary group
in protest at German involvement in the war against Yugoslaviaa
step greeted by Goetsch who also stepped up her efforts to close
ranks with the CDU.
In fact, the CDU and Greens have already been cooperating together
in two Hamburg districtsAltona and Harburgand according
to media reports cooperation with the CDU takes place pragmatically,
in a spirit of mutual confidence, and as equal partners.
In both districts the Left Party was able to gain above-average
support in the latest election.
Ostracising the Left Party
The Greens in Hamburg and the local SPD led by Klaus Naumann
strictly reject any kind of cooperation with the Left Party, although
this rejection is not directed against the party as such. After
all, the SPD has worked closely with the Left Party in Berlin
for years.
This became clear during a recent television talk show. Klaus
von Dohnanyi (SPD), a former mayor of Hamburg and a representative
of the right wing of the SPD, argued vehemently against any cooperation
with the Left Party, while at the same time admitting it had been
a big mistake for the SPD not to accept the middle and lower cadres
of the Stalinist SED (Stalinist state party of former East Germany
and forerunner to the PDS and Left Party) following German reunification
in 1990.
The German ruling elite is well aware of the utterly reliable
role played by the Left Party in those regions of the country
where it shares power. The aim of the current campaign to ostracise
the Left Party, however, is to ensure that issues raised by the
party in its recent campaigns in the westgrowing social
inequality and other social issueswill be excluded from
the public domain.
The issue of how to react to the Left Party has already led
to violent conflicts inside the SPD. While right-wing elements
inside the party are strictly opposed to any collaboration, a
wing led by party Chairman Kurt Beck is intent on integrating
the Left Party into mainstream politics at a federal levelin
a similar manner to the way in which the Greens were integrated
into the political establishment 25 years ago. In return, the
Left Party has declared its own willingness to cooperate and,
for example, offered the Hesse SPD unconditional support in forming
a state coalition government.
See Also:
Hesse after the election
Germanys Left Party woos the SPD
[15 February 2008]
An exchange on the result of the election
in Hesse, Germany
[14 February 2008]
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