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The German PDS: an establishment party which calls itself
socialist
By Ulrich Rippert
13 September 2002
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At a meeting called by the Sächsische Zeitung,
an influential regional newspaper with close links to the German
Social Democratic Party (SPD) based in Dresden, the capital city
of the eastern German state of Saxony, the main speaker was Roland
Claus. Claus is chairman of the parliamentary fraction of the
PDS (Party of Democratic Socialismformerly the East German
Stalinist SED) and had travelled from Berlin in order to submit
himself to the so-called crossfire of questions by
the SZ reporters. The city of Dresden was at the epicentre of
devastating floods which particularly affected large areas of
East Germany.
There was an air of unreality, something ominous about the
meeting. Held in the great hall of the Old Slaughterhouse,
a decrepit building in the middle of a landscape dominated by
industrial ruins, the light in the meeting room was subdued. Two
thirds of the 500 seats in the hall were empty. The rest were
occupied by members of the PDS who all appeared to know one another
from the old days of the SED, before the fall of the Berlin wall.
They greeted one another in a friendly fashion, and it was apparent
the average age of the audience was 60 and upwards.
The PDS candidate made a very different impression. PDS fraction
leader Roland Claus is 48 years old, suntanned from his recent
holiday, and sported a smart dark suit with black T-shirt. He
leapt onto the illuminated stage. The first questions by the two
reporters resembled a format popular in television shows where
contestants are called upon to complete unfinished sentences:
What I like most about election candidate Stoiber [candidate
of the right-wing Union parties in the upcoming national elections]
is...? Clauss reply: that he will never be chancellor.
Next sentence ... to the notion that the PDS fails to enter
the German parliament? Clauss reply: I cannot
imagine it. I am absolutely incompetent to answer that question.
The meeting continued for one-and-half-hours, with the two
journalists giving cues which Roland Claus used to reiterate the
election programme of the PDS. Interest in what he said was minimal.
Most of those present seemed to be familiar with such election
speeches and did not take them very seriously. Anyone with any
knowledge of the PDS knows that it is a party which, when in power,
takes decisions completely contrary to its programme and election
promises.
In his short period in power as Economics Senator for Berlin,
for example, former PDS leader Gregor Gysi agreed with other PDS
senators to the destruction of 15,000 jobs in public service,
the lengthening of the working week for state officials and drastic
cuts in the payments to those dependent on social assistance.
At the same time he undertook to support the bankrupt Bankgesellschaft
Berlin AG to the sum of 21.6 billion euros.
The situation is not very different in the East German state
of Magdeburg, where the PDS has supported the cuts in the social
fabric carried out by the SPD-led government of Reinhard Höppner
(SPD), or in Schwerin, where the PDS minister for Labour and Construction
and vice president of the state of Mecklenburg-Vorpommern, Helmut
Holter, has pushed through a ruthless privatisation of public
services.
Two things stood out at the meeting in Dresden: firstly, that
the speakers had nothing to say about the variety of problems
confronting the majority of inhabitants of the region. Secondly,
it was also apparent that no one really expected any answers from
the PDS. Apart from 120 pensioners who had responded to an invitation
for a free night out, nobody else came aside from a handful of
school children who sat in the first row and clapped in the manner
of the FDJ (youth organisation of the SED). Notable by their absence
were the leading candidate of the party in Dresden and the local
PDS leadership.
Instead, the executive of the local party organisation published
a statement a few days prior to the meeting calling for a cancellation
of the election campaign and a delay in the holding of national
elections set for September 22. The reason given in the statement:
the flood catastrophe had created such enormous problems and called
for such huge social efforts that any petty party conflict
should be put on the back burner.
Shortly afterwards the best known PDS politician in Saxony
and member of the state leadership, Christine Ostrovski, made
known that she was withdrawing immediately from the election campaign.
At a press conference she declared: Two personal blows have
forced me to make this move. First, she noted, her house
in the Dresden district of Alttrachau had been badly damaged by
flood waters and had to be dried out. Second, her partner lay
in hospital with a serious illness. As a result, Ostrovski cancelled
all her election engagements but insisted on remaining a candidate.
This decision says more over the real role of the PDS as a
thoroughly loyal, establishment party than a hundred election
speeches.
In common with many other east German cities and communities,
social conflict is patently evident in the capital city of Saxony.
Upon leaving the centre of town with its many buildings steeped
in historical tradition, expensive hotels, shopping centres, boutiques
and the thoroughly modern so-called Glass Factoryrecently
built by Volkswagen for the production of luxury carsone
does not have to go far before encountering extremes of poverty.
The recent flood and the subsequent distribution of compensation
funds has only served to deepen the gulf between rich and poor.
Under these circumstances the call for an end to the election
campaign only serves to silence any critical voices. In knee-jerk
fashion the PDS reacts to any and every social disruption and
political conflict by drawing closer together with the political
establishment. The party seeks to stifle and suppress any popular
criticism or resistance.
It is in this respect that the PDS, in particular, demonstrates
its continuity with its Stalinist predecessor, the SED. Many of
the elderly members of the audience in Dresden would have much
preferred to have greeted the figure of Hans Modrow instead of
Roland Claus. In the period before the collapse of the GDR, Modrow
was the all-powerful SED head of the region and still functions
today as an honorary chairman of the PDS. Modrow never beat about
the bush when it came to describing the role of the SED/PDS in
the critical period surrounding the collapse of the Berlin wall.
Functioning at that time as transitional head of the crumbling
GDR state, he saw his task in keeping the police-state apparatus
in good shape until the bourgeoisie in the west of the country
could take power. In his memoirs of 1991 he wrote in typical fashion:
For me the issue was to maintain the rule of law in the
country and prevent chaos.
Although the PDS continues to include the designation socialism
in its official party name, as a party it never seriously questioned
the introduction of capitalist property relations and the capitalist
state. Its retention of socialist rhetoric is mainly aimed at
heading off growing dissatisfaction in the East of Germany resulting
from widespread social devastation.
When questions from the public were finally allowed after a
period of two hours, this author directly addressed the issue
of the role played by the PDS as a defender of the existing bourgeois
order.
To the question why the PDS called for a halt to the election
campaign precisely at a point when social conflicts were intensifying,
Claus answered with an unconditional defence of the position of
the PDS state organisation. In light of the great problems
created by the floods, he said, together with the huge social
tasks which confront the region, it was necessary to put
an end to petty party conflicts.
In a second question to Claus, I pointed out that the central
answer of the PDS to the problem of mass unemployment was the
sponsoring of the middle class and small businesses in the manner
of Germanys neo-liberal Free Democratic Party. I asked how
such policies could have any thing to do with socialism or a party
which called itself a left-wing force.
The next day the Sächsische Zeitung reported the
exchange at the Dresden meeting and cited the answer given by
Claus. I regard the sponsoring of small business as expressly
not anti-socialist. It can be very well compatible with social
justice when one attempts to improve the chances of small and
middle-sized companies and support them in their struggle against
the megalomania and excessive power of the major banks and concerns.
Claus neglected to make clear that the PDS seeks to strengthen
the middle class at the cost of the working population and not
the big banks and companies. A number of years ago, under the
title ÖBS (Public Employment Sector), the party demanded
that public services be carried out by small private companies,
which after an initial cash injection, should operate on the profit
principle. Such services included neighbourhood assistance schemes,
care of the elderly, care of children and even dogs, as well as
shopping services. In Saxony, Christine Ostrovski even went so
far as to found an PDS employers organisation and proposed transforming
the PDS into an East German Peoples Party based on
the Bavarian Christian Social Union.
In fact, the most important task of socialist politics has
always been to strengthen the social influence of the working
classa task which by no means excludes necessary help for
small farmers, self-employed and small businesses. The liberation
of the working class must be the task of the working class itself
was the way Karl Marx posed the issue 150 years ago. The PDS defends
a diametrically opposed position. It undertakes to suppress any
independent movement of the working class. In the manner of a
seismograph of political development, the party reacts to the
slightest social disturbance with measures aimed at stabilising
the bourgeois status quo.
See Also:
The PDS and the German floods
The case of Dresden
[5 September 2002]
Families devastated by Dresden
flood forced to shift for themselves
[26 August 2002]
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