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European elections: Socialist Equality Party of Germany receives
nearly 26,000 votes
By Ludwig Niethammer
16 June 2004
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The German Socialist Equality Party (Partei für Soziale
GleichheitPSG) recorded its best ever result in European
elections held on June 13th. Its joint list of candidates for
all 16 German states received a total of 25,824 votes.
Compared to the votes obtained by the PSG and its predecessor
organisation in the European election of 1994 and German national
elections in 1998, the PSG more than doubled its vote. In 1994,
the forerunner of the PSG, the Bund Sozialistischer Arbeiter (League
of Socialist WorkersBSA), received 10,678 votes. In the
1998 national elections, in which the PSG ran candidates in six
states, the party received 6,226 votes.
This increase in votes is of considerable political significance.
It shows that a section of workers, intellectuals and youth are
beginning to seriously take up political issues and support an
international socialist perspective.
In its election campaign, the PSG made clear that the political
task was not to put pressure on the German Social Democratic Party
(SPD) and Green Party, or seek merely to win protest votes. The
election manifesto of the PSG began with the words: Our
election campaign is aimed at laying the foundation for a new
party that represents the interests of working people, including
pensioners, the unemployed and young people.
Providing the basis for such a party, the PSG presented a programme
that differentiated itself clearly from that of social democracy.
Its central points were the international unity of the working
class, the reorganisation of the economy along socialist lines,
and the development of a politically conscious revolutionary movement
of broad layers of working people.
As the election manifesto stated: Socialism is incompatible
with bureaucratic domination. Real social progress is possible
only if the broad mass of the population is actively involved
in the organisation of social relations and controls them democratically.
The statement went on to say, Our election campaign is aimed
at launching a broad discussion of these critical questions.
The election result demonstrates that this appeal found a significant
response.
The most politically significant and biggest source of increased
votes for the PSG came from regions in the west of the country
that have previously been the heartland of the SPD.
The largest number of votes for the PSG from a single German
state3,828came from North-Rhine Westphalia. (This
compares to 1,146 votes in the 1994 European election). However,
in other states such as Baden-Württemberg (2,637) and Bavaria
(1,853) in the south of the country, the PSG was able to more
than double its previous totals. In many small and middle-sized
towns the PSG received a significant portion of its total vote,
i.e., Ravensburg (157) and Hannover (249).
In the states of the former East Germany the PSG also drew
increased support. In Saxony-Anhalt the party won 2,339 votes.
In the former industrial regions of Dessau and Halle the PSG vote
rose to nearly 0.5 percent.
In the capital city of Berlin, which is governed by a coalition
of the SPD and the Party of Democratic Socialism (PDS), the PSG
received a total of 1,404 votes. In 1994, the party obtained 635
votes in Berlin, and in the 1998 national election it won 298
votes. This growth in votes is unmistakably a response from voters
seeking an alternative policy after a period of social cost-cutting
by the city administration.
The PSG was able to win this support despite a virtual boycott
of the party by the media. Apart from a number of radio and television
election spots, the PSG campaign was exclusively based on the
distribution of its election programme, thousands of which were
disseminated. In addition, a series of articles and statements
on important political developments in Europe, the US and across
the globe appeared on the World Socialist Web Site and
the PSG election web site, providing a vital political orientation
for voters.
The programme of the PSG differed fundamentally from those
of all other parties participating in the election. Apart from
the established bourgeois parties with representation in the German
parliament, the majority of other organisations that stood candidates
were of the political right. They reacted to globalisation by
demanding a tightening of national borders.
In opposition both to the bourgeois European Union and the
nationalist opponents of the EU, the PSG put forward the perspective
of the United Socialist States of Europe. From this standpoint,
the party called for the defence of the rights of immigrants and
refugees, and devoted a considerable section of its programme
to this issue.
Besides the SPD, the only other nominally left
parties taking part in the elections were the PDS and the DKP
(German Communist Party). The two latter organisations have their
roots in Stalinism. As the German section of the International
Committee of the Fourth International, the PSG is rooted in the
traditions of the Trotskyist movement, which opposed Stalinism
from the standpoint of internationalism and revolutionary Marxism.
The PDS emerged directly from the Socialist Unity Party (SED),
the Stalinist ruling party of the former East Germany. Following
the collapse of East Germany, the newly formed PDS adopted a programme
based firmly on the defence of the bourgeois order. This party
is currently part of governing coalitions in three German states,
where it has supported drastic cuts in social welfare programs.
The DKP was a West German offshoot of the SED, and was dependent
on its sister partys financial and political support. In
the post-war period, the DKP served as a loyal prop of the bourgeois
order in West Germany. In the 1970s, the party offered its services
to the trade union bureaucracy, carrying out thuggish attacks
on Trotskyists and other left-wing opponents. In the 1980s, the
DKP sought to silence all those who questioned the policies of
the official peace movement. After the collapse of East Germany,
the DKP retained its Stalinist leanings while refusing to enter
the ranks of the PDS.
With its latest election result, the PSG has neared the vote
received by the DKP, which still possesses an apparatus and financial
resources based on its continuing relations with the trade union
bureaucracy. For example, in the state of Saxony the PSG won 3,472
votes, a larger total than that obtained by the DKP. In a number
of working class areas, e.g., Bautzen, Meißen and Löbau-Zittau,
the vote for the PSG was considerably higher that that for the
DKP.
These numbers have a special significance. For decades, Stalinism
was able to utilise large party apparatuses and enormous financial
resources, underwritten by the Kremlin, to hold down the genuine
representatives of revolutionary socialism. With the ignominious
collapse of East Germany and the decline of the SPD, this period
has ended.
In relation to the total size of the electorate, the vote for
the PSG remains small. Nevertheless, this latest election result
reflects an unmistakable political trend that is still in its
early stages: a turn by tens of thousands of politically conscious
people toward a socialist alternative.
See Also:
European governments rocked by EU election
results
[15 June 2004]
German SEP candidate in the
European elections: For full democratic and social rights
for all refugees and immigrants
[8 May 2004]
Election statement of German
SEP: For the United Socialist States of Europe
[27 March 2004]
German Socialist Equality Party
to stand in European elections:
Statement of the Socialist Equality Party (Germany)
[7 February 2004]
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