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Germany: protests held in over 140 towns and cities
By a WSWS reporting team
28 August 2004
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For the fourth consecutive week, tens of thousands took part
in protests last Monday against social cuts that the Social Democratic-Green
coalition government plans to implement in 2005. More than 60,000
people took to the streets in the cities of Leipzig, Magdeburg
and Berlin alone. In addition, demonstrations were held in 140
small and medium-sized towns.
The centre of the protests was again in the east of Germany,
where the unemployment rate, currently 18.4 percent, is almost
twice as high as in the west. As in previous weeks, the demonstrators
represented a cross-section of the populationyoung people,
old-age pensioners and unemployed, but also many workers and self-employed
who know that they too will be hit, sooner rather than later,
by the effects of the governments Hartz IV laws.
Many participated with their entire families.
What particularly enraged the demonstrators was the announcement
by Wolfgang Clement, the Social Democratic Party (SPD) minister
for labour and the economy, that the government planned to create
600,000 so-called one-euro-jobs in the public sector.
This means the long-term unemployed, who receive benefits (money
for housing and heating, plus 331 euros) will be forced to accept
jobs provided by the state paying one euro per hour.
Most demonstrators quite rightly took these one-euro-jobs as
a provocation. The effect would be the substitution of low-wage
employment for decently-paying jobs, rather than the creation
of new jobs at a living wage. In Leipzig, two women carried a
homemade banner saying: What did we do to you, Herr Clement,
to make you treat us like this?
In Magdeburg, the state capital of Saxony-Anhalt, where the
current wave of protests started, the turnout was a little
less than the week before, according to organizers. However,
in many smaller cities in the area, demonstrations were held for
the first time.
A team of supporters of the Partei für Soziale Gleichheit
(PSGGerman Socialist Equality Party), who distributed a
statement to the demonstrators, was received warmly, with many
of the marchers eager to discuss the political issues raised by
the PSG. A 39-year-old truck driver and father of four joined
in the distribution of the leaflet.
Although the governmentwith the support of all the establishment
parties, as well as the employers associations, the churches
and most trade unionshas repeatedly stressed there would
be no concessions, many demonstrators still believe more pressure
from the streets would force the government to retreat.
An elderly man who had participated in the organisation of
the protest stressed that pressure from below had to grow in
order to show capital just where its limits are. A retired
mechanical engineer said that the movement just had to stick together,
maintain its determination, and expand until the reforms
were retracted. One had to, he said, demand the implementation
of the promises made by then-chancellor Helmut Kohl (of the conservative
Christian Democratic UnionCDU) to the people in the east
at the time of the reunification of Germany in 1989-1990.
Another worker, who had been employed at an engineering concern
for 30 years before being dismissed in 1997, carried a homemade
sign reading: Germany 2004. For the CDU, SPD, FDP, Greens
and PDS, socialism has been achieved. The people have been locked
out.
He complained about the bigwigs of the SED (Socialist Unity
Party, the former Stalinist ruling party in East Germany, which
renamed itself the Party of Democratic SocialismPDS
in 1990). They kept their top positions in the factories and workplaces,
he said, and fired the workers. He himself had been through that
experience.
A middle-aged car mechanic, who has been unemployed since 1992,
said that none of his hopes had been fulfilled in the wake of
the collapse of the German Democratic Republic (GDREast
Germany). He had been in favour of Kohl and German reunification,
he said, but three years later he was dismissed from his job.
Since then, he has been through one training and public employment
program after another. He felt, however, that the idea of building
a new workers party was utopian.
A retired economist, who had been a member of the SED and spent
his entire working life in a large chemical plant, said that he
had warned his colleagues against the reintroduction of capitalism
in 1989 but nobody wanted to listen. He had participated in the
1989 demonstrations against the SED government because he wanted
a more democratic GDR.
He said a new socialist movement had to be built, but thought
it was impossible. The PDS, he agreed, could not become the starting
point of such a movement. Everybody in Saxony-Anhalt knew that,
since the PDS had supported the notorious Magdeburg model
authored by the minority government of the SPD and Greens, led
by Saxony-Anhalt minister president Höppner. However, he
would vote for the PDS because the other parties were even worse.
The PSG team met two students of sociology who had come all
the way from the (western) city of Hannover to support the demonstrations
in east Germany.
In Berlin, there were two separate demonstrations. The protest
alliance Hartz IV Must Go!, which is dominated by
Attac and the PDS, marched to the national headquarters of the
Greens. This was a transparent attempt to divert pressure away
from the SPD and the PDS, which form the government in Berlin.
Another initiative, Mondays Against 2010, which is
influenced by a Maoist group, led a march to the SPD headquarters.
Not only in Berlin, but also in Leipzig, conflicts had arisen
among the organizers of the demonstrations. In Leipzig, an alliance
called Social JusticeStop Social Cuts had invited
former SPD chairman Oskar Lafontaine to address the final rally.
However, the original organizers of the demonstrations, the Social
Forum Leipzig, would not accept Lafontaine as a speaker.
Forum spokesperson Winfried Helbig explained to the WSWS: First
of all, the invitation to Lafontaine had not been discussed and
agreed upon by the Social Forum, and secondly, it ran counter
to our principles. We have always said that we want to preserve
our independence from political parties and do not want any party
representatives or high-ranking politicians in our ranks. Lafontaine
is no exception. Helbig said that the Monday demonstrations
had emerged as a citizens forum, and the platform
should primarily be given to people who were personally affected.
On this Monday, many demonstrators in Leipzig voiced their
anger over the anti-social policies of the national government
headed by SPD Chancellor Gerhard Schröder, as they marched
through the historic city centre. While most did not join in the
shouting of slogans, the number of banners reading Schröder
Must Go had increased noticeably from previous Monday demonstrations.
When asked by the WSWS who should replace Schröder if
he were forced to resign, two women carrying such a banner replied:
There is nobody today who represents our interestsnot
the CDU or the FDP (Free Democratic Party). But Schröder
must go.
Peter Otto, 54, carried a banner reading: 1989-2004We
Are the PeopleBetrayal! He explained to our reporters:
We are being betrayed for the second time. First Kohl promised
a flourishing economy, then Schröder promised jobs and social
justice. Politics is supposed to be decided upon by the people,
but no matter how much we shout that We are the people,
nobody takes any notice.
Otto told us that he had worked at an agricultural cooperative.
After the collapse of the GDR, he founded his own firm. He invested
all his money in machinery and worked 12 to 15 hours a day. However,
his business did not have a chance of surviving, given the harsh
competition from large companies and the corruption of state officials.
He has been unemployed for four years. What annoys me most
are the brazen claims of some politicians that we are just lazy
and dont want to work. Thats just too much,
Otto said.
At the final rally, several unemployed workers spoke from the
platform. A dyslexic described the arrogant reaction of the authorities
to his disability, and a woman who was almost blind said it was
a shame how the government treated the weakest members of society.
Götz Rubisch, an unemployed worker from Halle, exclaimed
to applause from the audience: What have we done to deserve
the punishment of poverty? Are we not worth more than one euro
an hour? Are we really demanding too much? All we want is to live
in dignity through our own work.
He then recalled the propaganda that was used 15 years ago
to paint the Western world, above all the US, in rosy colours.
Just remember all these lies they told us! But now we know
about the nature of capitalism, and that in the US, many people
are forced to have two or even three jobs and frequently work
14 hours to feed themselves and their familieswith bad food.
The final speaker was Christa Czech, an elderly woman from
Leipzig, who last year wrote a letter to the federal government
formulated in the manner of a complaint, such as was
commonly made use of in the GDR. Her letter began with the words:
In the name of all those whose voices are not being heard
or who have long given up hope, I want to get involved in politics
because I am concerned about the fate of our county.
She then described the situation in the following manner: One
fourth of all Germans share three fourths of all financial means.
Three quarters of all Germans, on the other hand, have to share
between themselves the remaining quarter. That is a scandal! Before
the last national elections, the SPD promised us more social justice.
What remains of that? Empty phrases!
She warned that the lowering of unemployment benefits to the
level of social security would drive more and more people into
bitter poverty and despair, even to suicide. The top earners,
she said, without exception, should be forced to participate
in the financing of the welfare system.
See Also:
The Monday Demonstrations in Germany1989
and today
[25 August 2004]
Germany: Which way forward in the struggle
against Hartz IV?
[21 August 2004]
Mounting protests against social cuts
in Germany
Monday demonstrations spread to more than 100 towns
[21 August 2004]
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