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Election Alternative meets in Berlin
Another safety valve for German social democracy
By our correspondent
28 June 2004
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The first national conference of Election Alternative:
Jobs and Social Justice held June 20 in Berlin clearly exposed
the political character and purpose of this grouping. Rather than
a vehicle for growing social opposition to the government of German
Chancellor Gerhard Schröder, it constitutes a bureaucratic
mechanism to divert this opposition and to protect the ruling
Social Democratic Party (SPD).
The conference proceedings vindicated the World Socialist
Web Sites prognosis that, given its reformist
program, the organization would soon renounce even the limited
aims it had initially proclaimed.
The conference contradicted the basic assertion made by Election
Alternative (EA) in their first public statement issued in March
of this year. In order to achieve some kind of political
progress, they wrote, we need a serious electoral
alternative that will transform the social pressure from outside
parliament into the political system.
If this plan had been serious and viable, EA could have started
to put it into practice with its first conference. The political
conditions could hardly be more favourable. Following its devastating
losses in the European elections, the Social Democratic Party
is weakened and open to attack. A decisive call on working people
to go on the offensive against the social attacks by the Schröder
government would certainly get a response.
But the EA went out of its way to prevent any such mobilization.
Its conference was characterized by frantic back-pedalling. The
main speakers on its platform were not even members of the EA,
and they warned about the risks of forming a party. Two speakers
from the floor who pressed for rapid action were summarily ignored.
Axel Troost, the economist from Bremen who had authored the
programmatic discussion paper for the conference, told the press
that the group would definitely not run candidates in North Rhine
Westphalia state elections next year. (North Rhine Westphalia
is the most populous and most industrialized state of [West] Germany
and was the heartland of Social Democracy during the postwar period.)
Troost announced that first a registered society will be founded
on July 3. This groups members will then decide in October
or November 2004 whether or not a party should be formed. If a
party is founded, eventually another decision will be taken as
to whether it will put up candidates in the 2006 national elections.
With all this manoeuvring, the EA joins the numerous doctors
who have assembled at the SPDs deathbed in an attempt to
revive the party.
German Federation of Trade Unions President Michael Sommer,
for example, wrote a June 18 letter to Chancellor Schröder
offering to stop criticising the governments attacks on
social benefits in return for a few cosmetic changes to the notorious
Agenda 2010 program of cutbacks. Meanwhile, Oskar
Lafontaine, a supposedly left figure in the SPD who resigned as
Schröders finance minister in 1999, used the occasion
of the recent SPD conference in the state of Saarland to publicly
shake hands with Franz Müntefering, the righ-wing SPD chairmana
picture widely publicised by the German media. Jusos, the SPD
youth organisation, joined in. We must save the party!
its new chairman, Björn Böhning, pleaded at the Jusos
national congress in Munich.
Election Alternative forms part of this front, trying to provide
support to the SPD from without. The aim of this potential electoral
alliance is to uphold the SPDs traditional political grip
over the German working class.
This is the only way to understand the otherwise implausible
course of its first national conference. The main initiators of
Election Alternative hardly showed up in publicwith the
exception of Axel Troost, who limited himself to chairing the
discussion and giving a brief statement to the press. Two of the
four seats on the platform were turned over to speakers who specifically
opposed the formation of a new party.
In opening the conference, Sabine Lösing from Attac summed
up the orientation of that grouping: to pressure the parties presently
represented in parliament from outside. She argued that there
exists no potential for changes inside the SPD, and that the SPD
is no longer able to attract and unite ordinary working people,
the unemployed and the underprivileged. The Party of Democratic
Socialism, PDS (the successor to East Germanys former ruling
Stalinist party) likewise had discredited itself by participating
in social cuts carried out by SPD-PDS governments in the eastern
state of Mecklenburg-Vorpommern and in Berlin.
The next speaker was Detlef Hensche, a well-known figure in
Germanys trade union and left milieu. Until 2001, Hensche
headed the Industrial Union of Media Workers (IG Medien) and he
now works as a lawyer in Berlin. Hensche, 65, resigned from the
SPD after 40 years membership in 2003. It is totally
illusionary to hope for a renewal of the SPD, he declared.
Hensche, however, does not participate in Election Alternative
and warned against founding a new party prematurely.
Without roots in a broad social movement, he argued, such a party
would share the fate of the Greens and the PDS. It would embark
upon the same path of adaptation and integration into establishment
policies. The main task, he said, was the development of social
movements.
Anger, disappointment and protest alone do not suffice
as a platform, Hensche stressed. It was not enough to put
forward a trade union perspective in defence of the welfare
state. What was lacking, he claimed, was the emergence
of a concrete utopia, which could only result from a generalization
of the experience of social struggles. He repeatedly warned
against reaching out for parliamentary representation without
the necessary preparatory work in civil society.
This argument was entirely in line with the reasoning of the
EAs initiators. They too refer to the primacy of organizing
social strugglesin order to suppress a discussion
about the fundamental lessons of social democracys failure.
While Hensches reasoning followed the same basic line, he
took it to the logical conclusion: a new party is unwarranted.
Both the EAs and Hensches talk about social
strugglesin opposition to drawing programmatic lessonsserves
to uphold the political disenfranchisement of the population and
prevent a political challenge to the SPD. An electoral alliance
formed on this basis would merely serve as a safety valve for
popular discontent.
The next speaker on the platform, Peter Wahl from the leadership
of Attac Germany, echoed Hensches line. He praised Attac
for its role in the mobilisation against the neo-liberal
policies of the past three years and expressed his scepticism
about the new project. There were differences within
Attac on this issue, he said. Attac Germany had taken a decision
not to participate in the potential electoral alliance, to remain
at a certain distance and to take a neutral
stance. If Attac members participated, they would be suspended
from any positions in the organization, and if they were elected
they would have to resign from all Attac official functions.
This position, Wahl claimed, stemmed from a deep distrust
toward any party project following the experience with the
Greens and the PDS. Attacs conclusion from this experience
is not to subject it to serious political analysis, but to leave
the field to the SPD. This is hardly surprising, given that Attac
from its origins has been closely aligned with European social
democracy.
The last speaker was Anny Heike, a leading official from the
IG Metall local in the Bavarian city of Fürth. She is the
only founder of the Initiative for Jobs and Social Justice
(ASG)one of the two component groups of Election Alternative
Jobs and Social Justicewho has no history in the SPD.
Heike described the impact of the Agenda 2010 cutbacks on union
members and reiterated that she had become politically active
in order to influence government policies. Apart from Heike, only
two other of the six ASG founders turned up at the conferenceKlaus
Ernst, who gave a brief statement from the floor, and Thomas Händel,
who came to the press conference.
Joachim Bischoff and Ralf Krämer, the two main initiators
of Election Alternative, did not speak publicly at
the conference. Their conduct was symptomatic of the unprincipled
character of the entire project. Joachim Bischoff, editor of the
sozialismus newspaper, has been active for decades
in trade union policies, and Ralf Krämer belongs to the executive
of ver.di, Germanys service sector union. Both joined the
PDS in recent years and have authored the political line that
is now being used to construct a safety net for social democracy.
See Also:
European elections: debacle for the German
SPD
[22 June 2004]
Germany: report shows Berlin sinking deeper
into poverty
[19 June 2004]
European elections: Socialist Equality
Party of Germany receives nearly 26,000 votes
[16 June 2004]
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