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Germany: Defeat for reformers at PDS conference
in Gera
By Hendrick Paul and Peter Schwarz
19 October 2002
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Three weeks after its poor showing in the German national elections,
the PDS (Party of Democratic Socialism, formerly the Stalinist
ruling party, SED, of East Germany) is being torn apart by internal
divisions.
The partys eighth national conference, held October 12-13
in the East German city of Gera, was dominated by heated struggles
between opposing wings of the partywith the so-called traditionalist
wing led by party chairman, Gabi Zimmer, emerging as clear winner.
The reform wing, which until now had played the leading
role inside the party, is no longer represented on the partys
executive committee and its two most prominent representatives,
Gregor Gysi and Lothar Bisky, who led the party two years ago,
did not even bother turning up for the conference.
The conflicts at the conference revolved around the causes
and conclusions to be drawn from the partys devastating
results in the elections of September 22. For the first time since
the reunification of Germany in 1990, the PDS failed to win the
five percent of the vote (or three candidates directly voted from
their constituencies), which is necessary for representation in
the German parliament (Bundestag). The party has been reduced
to a rump of just two deputies who were directly voted in their
East Berlin constituencies. Parallel to national elections the
PDS also lost a third of its vote to the Social Democratic Party
(SPD) in state elections in Mecklenburg-Vorpommern (East Germany).
The PDS has jointly governed the state for the past four years
in a coalition with the SPD.
The losses incurred by the PDS are the result of the partys
record in government in Mecklenburg-Vorpommern, Berlin (where
it has governed in the citys senate since January) and Saxony-Anhalt
(where the PDS has supported a minority SPD government). In power
the PDS has supported numerous attacks on Germanys social
welfare system, as well as cuts and privatisations. Such measures
stood in stark contrast to the pose adopted by the PDS in opposition.
Growing social divisions together with the turn to the right of
the SPD has made it impossible for the PDS to support the SPD
and at the same time maintain its public persona of opposition
to the dismantlement of social gains.
The reaction to the election debacle by the fraction led by
Zimmer was to distance itself from the SPD and mildly criticise
the practice of those members of the PDS who had shared state
government responsibility.
The honorary chairman of the PDS, Hans Modrow, who was a long
time member of the central committee of the SED and East German
prime minister at the time of reunification, set the tone for
the conference with his opening speech. He attacked those who
have decisively made their mark on the image of the partyever
closer to the SPD, and less and less self-governed. In her
own speech to the conference Zimmer declared: In my opinion
the PDS has to clearly develop its profile as a socialist party.
Germany does not need a second social democratic party.
She criticised her partys record in government by insisting,
The PDS in Mecklenburg-Vorpommern and Berlin is not responsible
for our election defeat, but nevertheless we should
take stock of the consequences of our participation in government.
One can rightly expect that the PDS does not just enter
into a competition about the best way to save, but instead acts
in a socially just fashion in difficult situations.
A motion proposed by Zimmer demanded that the PDS regard itself
as a force for social opposition and not a partner
or even pocket version project of the SPD and Greens. She
went onto openly attack the SPD-PDS senate in Berlin, stating,
Many people cannot understand that in Berlin billions of
tax-payers money is pouring into the pockets of wealthy
stockholders, while public service workers must do without well
deserved demands and at the same time very painful cuts are made
in the sphere of social services, cultural institutions and the
infrastructure.
Zimmers speech was greeted with anger by the reformers,
who believe that the future of the PDS is bound up with close
collaboration with the SPD. Just three days before the conference
the partys national executive voted down Zimmers motion,
which was carried at the party conference, and supported a rival
motion from the Berlin body of the organisation, which stated:
Like the SPD, the PDS is a democratic and social party of
reform. The motion spoke out against ideological declarations
and in favour of a pragmatic course of work inside government.
The PDS can only win back the confidence of voters through
practical politics, the Berlin motion insisted.
National co-coordinator Dietmar Bartsch called on Zimmer to
refrain from standing for re-election as party chair and announced
his own candidacy for the post.
At the conference the reformers, who were backed
by much of the German media, suffered a clear defeatmuch
to their own surprise. With 69 percent of the vote, Zimmer was
confirmed as party chair. Her rival in the vote, Roland Claus,
former leader of the partys parliamentary faction, received
just 24 percent of the vote. At the last moment Bartsch stood
down in the election to make way for Claus. Zimmers motion
was accepted and the Berlin proposal rejected.
The reformers then refused to put up candidates
for any other seats on the executive, allowing supporters of Zimmer
to take up the rest of the places. Even Sahra Wagenknecht, a leading
representative of the Communist Platform fraction of the PDS,
which glorifies the Stalinist system of East Germany, was able
to win a seat on the 14-strong executive. She received the fifth
largest vote of all the candidates. None of the former prominent
figures in the partyBartsch, Claus and the chair of the
Berlin group of the PDS, Petra Pauare now represented on
the executive.
According to some reports the entire group of reformers
considered leaving the party en masse on the evening of the elections.
Instead PDS groups from the states of Mecklenburg-Vorpommern,
Saxony-Anhalt, Berlin and Brandenburg agreed to coordinate their
future activity in a bloc against the supporters of Zimmer, who
are mainly based in the East German states of Saxony and Thuringia.
This move could very well be the first step towards a split in
the party, or a move by a section of the party into the ranks
of the SPD. It is an open secret that the SPD, which lacks members
and experienced politicians in the east of Germany, is actively
at work to recruit prominent members of the PDS.
Few programmatic differences
Despite the heated conflicts and intrigues on display at the
party conference, the division of the two wings into reformers
and traditionalists is exaggerated. It would be more
accurate to speak of two tendencies inside a reform wing.
The party newspaper Neues Deutschland conceded this point
on the eve of the party conference, when it noted cynically that
the struggle was in fact between realists and ultra-realists.
Zimmer emphasised the values of socialism against social democracy,
but never made clear what she considered to be the difference
between the two.
Since the emergence of the PDS from the SED, the party has
made clear that it favoured the reunification of Germany on the
basis of the introduction of capitalist property relations in
the east. The government lead by Hans Modrow saw its task as opening
up the way for reunification and, as he later wrote, preventing
any political destabilisation of the country.
Since having taken up the post of party chair two years ago
following the resignation of Lothar Bisky, Zimmer has neither
said nor done anything which could be interpreted as marking a
course opposed to that pursued by her current rivals inside the
party.
At the PDS conference in Münster in 2000, she was a defender
of the party executive when it attempted to change the partys
position on the issue of war, and suffered an embarrassing defeat
at the hands of delegates. Upon taking over as party chair she
also adopted a pronounced nationalist tone, and proclaimed her
love for Germany. She supported Petra Pau who, in an indirect
manner, made proposals to restrict the migration of foreign workers
to Germany.
Just a year ago, Zimmer was the leading figure on the party
executive calling for the expulsion of PDS members in the city
of Hamburg after the local organisation had put up a poster pointing
to the responsibility of American government policies for the
terror attacks of September 11 in New York and Washington.
Zimmer belongs to the pioneers inside the party who favoured
collaboration in government with the SPD. In 1999, when the PDS
was second to the CDU (Christian Democratic Union) in the state
of Thuringia, as chairman of the PDS fraction in the state parliament
Zimmer argued for forming a coalition with the SPD. The plan only
failed due to the massive loss of votes by the SPD, enabling the
CDU to secure an overall majority.
After the latest Gera conference, Zimmer immediately made overtures
to her opponents inside the party, who were predicting the imminent
end of the PDS. Zimmer sought to placate them, emphasising that
government participation is important for us and that
she was in no way arguing for an end to the PDS presence in the
coalitions in Berlin and Mecklenburg-Vorpommern.
The socialist phraseology employed by the PDS is there only
to attract those who have lost out in the process of reunification
and has no real practical consequences for the party. With its
invocation of social justice and nostalgia for the
East German state, the PDS appeals to those former members of
the old nomenclature who have failed in their career moves in
a united Germanyacademics without posts, small businessmen
whose hopes have been dashed. At the same time, the PDS seeks
to appeal to the unemployed and socially disadvantaged. All the
while, the party strives to win the recognition of the political
elite in Germany and maintain its position as a constitutional
force to be reckoned with.
The balancing act maintained by the party had already led to
numerous fraction struggles in the past. To the extent that the
party was regarded as a source of oppositional politics, it was
able to pick up new voters as the social crisis in Germany deepened.
But since assuming power in a number of East German states, the
party has no longer been able to disguise the real content of
its politics. As a consequence, droves of voters have turned their
back on the party.
This is the reason for the current conflicts. The faction lead
by Gysi, Bartsch, Claus and Pau is moving closer and closer to
the SPD and open defence of the state against growing political
and social opposition, while for its part, the group around Zimmer,
Modrow, et al, is determined to once again don the fig-leaf of
verbal opposition.
Much of the media in Germany has welcomed the decline of the
PDS, but there are also those who warn of the dangers arising
from the disappearance of the party. The left-liberal Frankfurter
Rundschau, for example, openly called upon social democrats
to integrate PDS members and supporters into their ranks should
they seek to prevent the frustration absorbed by the successor
party to the SED from erupting somewhere else and in a far more
radical form.
See Also:
PDS suffers severe loss in east German
state election
[3 October 2002]
The German PDS: an establishment
party which calls itself socialist
[13 September 2002]
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