|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : Europe
: Germany
100,000 demonstrate in Berlin against Schröders
Agenda 2010
By our reporters
4 November 2003
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email the
author
An estimated 100,000 marched Saturday in Berlin against the
German governments programme for drastic cuts in the welfare
state known as Agenda 2010. Those who called the demonstration,
including welfare organisations and groups representing the unemployed
and pensioners, together with a number of left radical groups,
expressed their surprise at the size of the protest. Over the
previous week, the demonstration had come under fire from government
representatives and had been largely boycotted by the trade unions.
In advance of the rally, the organisers were prepared to consider
any attendance in excess of 10,000 to be a success.

In the event, 300 buses came from across Germany, bringing
people to the biggest demonstration in Berlin since the massive
anti-war mobilisation in the spring of this year. Large numbers
of senior citizens marched alongside tens of thousands of young
people and entire families to express their anger and disgust
at government plans for the dismantling of social provisions and
guarantees that had their origins in the carrot-and-stick
policies of German chancellor Bismarck 130 years ago.
The huge, colourful and militant march wound its way through
the centre of Berlin, bringing traffic to a standstill for several
hours. Placards on the demonstration read Agenda 2010neo-liberal
and anti-welfare, Young people must fight for their
future, For training, education and jobs, and, in a play
on words based on the initials of the governing Social Democratic
Party (SPD), They Plunder Germany. Other banners and
chants on the demonstration called for a general strike and the
resignation of the government.

Although some flags of the worlds biggest trade union,
the service workers union Ver.di, were prominent at the
head of the march, many demonstrators complained bitterly of the
role played by the unions in undermining participation for the
demonstration. Many of those taking part in Saturdays protest
recalled the militant promises made by the chairman of Ver.di,
Frank Bsirske, at an anti-Agenda 2010 demonstration last May,
where he promised further and bigger protests against the governments
proposals.
In fact, since May, Ver.di, in line with the rest of the German
trade union movement, has systematically wound down its opposition
to the government. Only last week, Bsirske announced that he planned
to meet Chancellor Gerhard Schröder for personal discussions
on welfare cuts.
Germanys second biggest trade union, the engineering
union IG-Metall, effectively boycotted the protest Saturday, doing
virtually nothing to mobilise its members in the factories. Michael
Sommer, the chairman of the umbrella organisation of the German
trade unions, the DGB, actually met last week with the conservative
opposition party, the Christian Social Union (CSU), for joint
talks on the implementation of cuts to the German health system.
In addition to the political sabotage by the leadership of
the trade unions, Saturdays protest came under fire from
government representatives. A few days before the demonstration,
a co-chairman of the Green Party, Angelika Beer, attacked those
who planned to take part as politically inept. Leading
members of the Party of Democratic Socialism (PDS) could be seen
on the demonstration, but the party as a whole kept a low profile.
The PDS has been thoroughly discredited in recent months by its
direct participation in draconian cuts to social services and
education in the German capital.
The main speaker at the rally that followed the march was the
social scientist and researcher Rainer Roth, from the University
of Frankfurt. He drew attention to the enormous re-division of
wealth that has occurredwithin the past few years under the SPD-Green
Party coalition government.
Since 2001, he reported, German big business has benefited
by the sum of 50 billion euros from the governments abolition
of the corporate tax. Roth outlined some of the dramatic social
consequences of the unprecedented assault on German welfare provisions,
and called for international solidarity to combat the flight of
capital abroad. At the same time, he sought to revive confidence
in the trade unions by declaring that the policies of the French
and Italian unions represented a positive alternative to the corporatism
of the German DGB.
The Partei für Soziale Gleichheit (PSGSocialist
Equality Party) and World Socialist Web Site set up information
tables at the beginning of the march and the site of the final
rally. In addition, a team of PSG and WSWS supporters distributed
a leaflet headlined A Political
Answer to Social Cuts and War and
engaged in discussion with many participants.
The leaflet drew a balance of the recent period, explaining
the connection between the anti-social policies of the Schröder
government and its de facto support for the war in Iraq, and emphasising
the need for a new international workers party.
Christian, a young student who had travelled to the demonstration
with a delegation from Aachen, explained why he was taking part
and how the local trade unions had sought to undermine support
for the protest.
I am alarmed and appalled by the governments Agenda
2010. It represents a fundamental onslaught on the social fabric
and welfare state that have guaranteed social harmony in this
country for an entire epoch. I think it is correct to raise the
connection, as you do in your leaflet, between the domestic and
foreign policy of the German government.
In both regards, the common denominator is the interests
of German big business and industry. This was already clear with
the war against Iraq. German industry has its own long-standing
trade links in Iraq, and the Schröder government only issued
its initial criticism of US policy in the region out of concern
for its own interests. In fact, the German government collaborated
in the US-led war. Now it is demonstrating the same determination
and loyalty to big business in its campaign against working people
in Germany, and is being assisted by the unions...
Our delegation was organised by a local group protesting
against the dismantling of the welfare state. The organisation
had contacted the trade unions in Aachen, which declared they
would not be organising their own transport to the demo. It became
clear that they had not lifted a finger to mobilise or inform
their members in the city of the demonstration. In the event,
a handful of Ver.di members made the trip to Berlin with us, but
the union insisted it would only pay the travel costs of its own
members and not subsidise the bus we had organised. Because of
the low turnout for our coach, we will have to pay more for the
trip.
Ishild, who is 65 and lives in Berlin, told the WSWS that this
was her first day as a pensioner. I receive just 365 euros
per month, she said, because, like many women, I married
and raised my children. As a result, I worked for just 12 years
in my profession as a gardener.
The attacks on pensioners by the Schröder government
will have catastrophic consequences. Even for someone with a pension
of 900 euroshow can he or she be expected to pay rent, the
cost of food and medical payments? Meanwhile, the politicians
are putting up their own pay, and after just a few years in the
job receive a huge pension for which they have made no contribution.
Ishild was especially angry over the stance of the Greens,
which has faithfully supported the SPD in its assault on the German
welfare state. If the SPD and Greens need money, then why
do they not turn to those who have itthe wealthy and big
businessinstead of exploiting the poor and the needy? They
have turned on its head everything they promised before being
elected. When one thinks that the Greens originally posed as a
left alternative to the SPD, it is clear that their entire perspective
has come unstuck.
Ishild was also disappointed by the way in which both the SPD
and the Greens capitulated and abandoned their original opposition
to the Iraq war. It is an unjust war. According to international
law, the US and its allies should be forced to pay reparations
to the Iraqis, just as Germany paid reparations after the Second
World War.
Many of those taking part were active members of trade unions
who complained that the leadership of their unions refused to
give any support to the demonstration. A worker from the Philips
factory at Norderstedt near Hamburg travelled to Berlin with his
son. He had sent an e-mail to his local IG Metall chairman to
find out the details of transport to Berlin, but his inquiry was
simply ignored. Eventually, he was able to organise transport
with the help of some other rank-and-file trade unionists.
Every day, he said, there are announcements
of new, even more far-reaching attacks on the welfare state. It
seems that Schröder is always poised on some balcony, threatening
to jump if everybody does not accept his plans. If it were left
to me, I would call out: Do it! Jump!
Dieter, who is 59, used to be the
chairman of the trade union committee at an engineering works
in Solingen. He took early retirement last year because of ill
health. He told the WSWS: When I rang the trade union headquarters
in Solingen to ask about buses being put on by IG Metall or Ver.di,
I met with one rejection after another. Eventually, I was able
to travel with a bus organised by supporters of the attac
movement. I regard the stance of the union leadership to be thoroughly
irresponsible. We pay their wages, but what are they doing for
us?
An unemployed forester and attac supporter who came in the
same bus carried a placard proclaiming: The New World According
to ClementForced Labour. He explained that the aim
of Agenda 2010 was not, as Labour Minister Wolfgang Clement (SPD)
claimed, the creation of new jobs, but rather to establish
control over the millions of unemployed by forcing them to undertake
forms of forced labour. He added: The SPD is seeking
to reintroduce conditions which existed in the 19th century. Agenda
2010 is only a beginning, a pilot project in this direction.
See Also:
German government fleeces
pensioners and the unemployed
[23 October 2003]
German government, opposition
and employers propose drastic pension cuts
[21 October 2003]
Schröders Agenda
2010 and his offensive against the German population
[11 October 2003]
Germany: All-party coalition
agrees drastic reform of health system
[12 August 2003]
Germanys Agenda
2010: 10,000 demonstrate in Berlin against attack on social
conditions
[22 May 2003]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |