|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : Europe
: Germany
The European Union elections and the German far-right
By Max Rodenberg
26 June 1999
Use
this version to print
Seldom have the pollsters tried so hard to turn an election
result on its head, as in the aftermath of the German elections
for the European Parliament. Seldom has this task proved so difficult,
which is not hard to understand since the results were so unequivocal.
In the elections, held two weeks ago, the Social Democratic
Party (SPD) suffered a debacle, capturing a mere 31 percent of
the votes cast, a drop of 10 percent compared to the party's vote
in the German federal elections last autumn. The SPD's coalition
partners, the Greens, were just able to maintain their share of
the vote at 6.4 percent. Less than half of the electorate went
to the polls, the lowest turnout since the first direct elections
to the European Parliament in 1979.
The big victory of the Christian Democratsthey
registered an 11 percent nation-wide gain, as compared to the
federal elections, in their share of the votes castwas actually
based on a loss of 3.4 million votes in absolute terms. Such a
result cannot be interpreted as heralding a quick march
by the Christian Democrats back to power, as even the daily
Süddeutsche Zeitung noted.
All of the parties in Bonn maintain that the war in Yugoslavia
played no role in the election. Nothing could be further from
the truth. At the very least, it showed a remarkable lack of enthusiasm
for the war among broad layers of the population.
Germany's first offensive military action since the Second
World War has upset political conditions. Almost uncritical support
for the bombing of Yugoslavia ran straight through the political
establishment, marking an historical turning point in German foreign
policy.
The reawakening of German militarism will increasingly come
to set the direction for domestic policy as well. Chancellor Gerhard
Schröder's wordsthat German domestic policy must attain
the same level of excellence as German foreign policycould
hardly be more threatening.
What should working people expect? A further political turn
to the right. Schröder can be expected to propose a tax
and budget cuts concept and warn of difficult times
ahead.
The massive loss of votes by the Social Democrats expresses
not only disappointment with the New Middle',
(The German equivalent of Tony Blair's Third Way),
or frustration over the record of the Red-Green government
coalition. Broad layers of working people who put an end to the
Kohl era last autumn by voting for the SPD have now turned their
backs on all the parties in Bonn.
The experience of the last nine months has provided proof positive
that the SPD and the Greens have moved rapidly to the right. For
the first time in the history of the Federal Republic of Germany,
the establishment parties have received support from less than
half the electorate. From its share of the poll in the European
election, the governing SPD only represents 13.7 percent of all
eligible voters.
The fact that in Germany the growing alienation of the mass
of working people from the political establishment did not express
itself in increased votes for the extreme right is another important
aspect of the elections. The far right, like the bigger parties
in Bonn, received a cold shoulder. In contrast to the bourgeois
parties like the SPD, Greens, Christian Democrats and Liberals,
there has been no turn to the right in the general population.
The National Democratic Party of Germany (NPD) received 107,500
votes (0.4 percent). Compared with their result in the federal
elections, they lost 20,000 votes. However, in comparison with
their result in the 1994 European elections, they gained 30,000
votesmaking them the only party to increase their vote in
absolute terms.
The German Peoples Union (DVU), which has in the past garnered
a relatively high percentage of the protest vote, did not participate
in the European elections. They did, however, stand candidates
in the local elections, which were being held in six states, but
did not register exceptional results. In Saxony Anhalt, where
they captured over 12 percent of the vote in the last state elections,
they only managed 0.4 percent.
The clearest losses could be seen in the vote for the Republikaner
(Republicans), the largest party of the far right. They received
just 1.7 percent, a smaller share than in the federal elections
last September. Compared with the last European elections, they
have lost more than half their 3.9 percent share of the vote.
At that time some 1.3 million voters supported them; in this election
their vote fell to 460,000. Like last time, they will not be represented
in the European Parliament. In the 1989 European elections, the
Republikaner won a 7.1 percent share, which was sufficient
to give them six deputies. Together with the French and Belgian
far-right parties, Front National and Vlaams Blok,
they were able to form a technical faction in the
European Parliament.
It would, however, be a serious mistake to conclude that the
election results mean the German far-right have become an insignificant
factor. Such a superficial approach underestimates the significance
of these extreme right-wing tendencies.
The Republikaner were formed in 1983 as a right-wing
split-off from the Bavarian Christian Social Union (CSUelection
partners of the Christian Democratic Union). Their initial electoral
success brought them seats in many local councils, the state legislature
of Badem-Württemberg, and, in 1989, the European Parliament.
With such institutional successes, they sought to distance themselves
from their thuggish past and were able to attract conservative
layers of voters. In the Badem-Württemberg state elections
of 1992 they recorded their best results in the well-off belt
around the city of Stuttgart. This state also boasts the highest
per capita income of all Germany.
An increasingly fascist tendency has now concentrated itself
inside the NPD. While they like to present themselves as right-wing
intellectuals, the National Democrats deliberately recruit militant
youth and skinheads from the hot-spots of former East Germany.
The NPD have authoritatively participated in providing a theoretical
orientation to the far-right, using the Junge Freiheit
(Young Freedom) newspaper.
The more the establishment parties have adopted the policies
of the extreme right, the more the independent basis for such
parties has disappeared. Their loss of votes in the European elections
shows that Germany's far-right tendencies are returning to the
bosom of the mainstream parties.
This development can most clearly be seen in Bavaria. The CSU
is credited with having achieved a powerful victory,
its share of the votes cast having risen from 48.9 percent in
1994 to 64 percent today, a jump of 15.1 percent. In actual votes,
however, this translates into an increase of only 140,000. A total
of 2.5 million voted for the CSU.
In comparison, the Republikaner lost 250,000 votes (a
decline of 75 percent). The right-wing policies of the CSU and
their Bavarian Prime Minister Edmund Stoiber have simply made
the Republikaner superfluous. If such tendencies are now
starting to become active inside the establishment parties, it
is because the latter are increasingly amenable to nationalist
and racist politics.
See Also:
Social Democrats suffer record losses
in European elections
[15 June 1999]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |