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Germany: Hamburg state electionsSPD in free fall
By Ludwig Niethammer
18 March 2004
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The hammering suffered by the German Social Democratic Party
(SPD) in the prematurely held Hamburg state elections on February
29 could not have been clearer. With 30.5 percent of the votes
(a decline of 6 percentage points), the SPD recorded its worst
postwar result in Germanys second biggest city, which has
traditionally been a stronghold for the party. Up until the 1980s,
the SPD constantly received 50-60 percent of the votes and was
able to govern on its own for decades.
Droves of workers, unemployed and pensioners punished the SPD
for its non-stop attacks on the social welfare system, which has
reached its latest highpoint with the governments so-called
Agenda 2010. Everywhere the colourless leading candidate
of the SPD, Thomas Mirow, and his election team appeared, they
had to justify the social cuts and health care reforms carried
out by the Schröder government.
While in the city-states last election in 2001, the SPD
gained just 36.5 percent, it still emerged as the biggest single
party. At the time, the Christian Democrats (CDU) won 26.2 percent
and formed a governing coalition with the newly formed right-wing
populist Constitutional Offensive Party (PRO) headed by Ronald
Schill, which received 19.4 percent.
This time around, the CDU and current mayor of the city, Ole
von Beust, raked in 47.2 percent of the vote. The unusually large
increase of 21 percentage points gave the Hamburg CDU its best-ever
result. The PRO, which split after it was recently kicked out
of the senate and now goes under the name Pro DM/Schill, received
just 3.1 percent and together with the Free Democrats (FDP) (2.8
percent) failed to reach the 5 percent hurdle needed to enter
the senate. The Greens received 12.3 percent, an increase of 3.7
percentage points.
The continued decline of the social democrats is neither surprising
nor a cause for regret. Aside from the 2002 German federal election
narrowly won by the SPD, the Hamburg result is the fourth heavy
defeat in a row for the SPD. In the state and regional elections
in Lower Saxony, Bavaria and Brandenburg, the proportion of votes
for the SPD fell by nearly 10 percent. Moreover, the mass resignation
of SPD members, which continues unabated, shows that the party
is also losing its last traditional base of support. Since the
beginning of the 1990s, the SPD has lost a total of 300,000 members.
In the days of the Cold War, under conditions of an economic
upturn, the SPD was able to implement certain social concessions.
For many workers, the SPD was a synonym for social equilibrium.
The SPD glorified the market economy as a social model that could
offer the working population a worry-free futureprosperity,
democracy and a peaceful Europe was, according to this thesis,
in immediate reach.
What remains of such a perspective? Ordinary people are today
experiencing another reality. For five years, they have observed
how an SPD-Green coalition government has become increasingly
hostile to their interests. Former SPD voters look with dismay
at the way this government is axing the welfare state and attacking
democratic rights.
The huge shifts in the Hamburg election and the apparent overwhelming
victory of the CDU are, in the first instance, a result of the
bankrupt politics of the SPD.
Those who in 2001 voted for the Schill party in protest against
the SPD voted this time predominantly for the CDU. They did this,
however, not because they placed any trust in its politics. The
absolutely barren, one-man show of Ole von Beust could only make
an impact because there was no political alternative to be seen.
According to the Emnid opinion poll taken just before the election,
40 percent of respondents did not know whom they would vote for,
or if they should vote at all. Sixty-four percent were dissatisfied
with the CDU, FDP and PRO coalition senate government, which was
disbanded in December 2003, while 71 percent declined to support
the opposition SPD.
For some time now in Germany, any political debate over current
social problems has been replaced by utterly hollow election campaigns
managed by professional advertising agencies. In this respect,
the banal offerings served up during the Hamburg campaign represented
a new low point.
The Springer publishing house took advantage of its monopoly
of the Hamburg newspaper market and led the campaign for Ole von
Beust in a manner that can only be described as undemocratic.
It imparted to Beust a certain image to make him appear as modern,
cosmopolitan and, above all, Hanseatic (Hamburg is a so-called
Hansa citya traditional trading centre in Germany). For
weeks on end, he was the front-page hero with headlines such as
Ole-Superstar, Celebrities campaign for Ole
von Beust and Hamburgers come out for Ole von Beust
(a reference to his homosexuality). The aim was to carefully divert
attention from the catastrophic effects of his policies, including
education decline, the privatisation of hospitals and increasing
unemployment.
During the last election, the Springer press promoted the extreme
right winger Ronald Schill, who at the time promised to clean
up Hamburgby which he meant mainly clearing the city
of asylum-seekers, social welfare recipients, drug addicts and
homosexuals.
At that time, Beust brought Schillnicknamed Judge
Merciless (he served as a court judge)into the senate
and made him his interior minister, because he himself could only
become premier with Schills support. Together with the FDP,
which with 5.1 percent just made it into the senate, Beust led
a coalition that achieved virtually nothing. Schill and his Constitutional
Offensive Party only made a name for itself in relation
to a succession of corruption scandals carried out by its senators.
In the summer of 2002, the first bust-up with Schill came about.
As a representative of the state of Hamburg, he spoke in the Bundestag
(German parliament) and used the debate about the 2002 flood catastrophe
to spew out a series of filthy racist remarks against asylum-seekers.
On several occasions, he overran his allotted speaking time and
could only be stopped with some effort by the Bundestag vice president,
who in the end turned off the microphone. However, this did not
really worry Beust. In addition, the constant announcement of
new shady dealings and financial irregularities, involving leading
PRO politicians, could not shake Beusts coalition loyalty
to Schill.
Only last December, when Schill, at the highpoint of a crisis
within the coalition, threatened to make Beusts homosexuality
public, did Beust throw his interior minister out of the government.
Schill had accused his first-name basis colleague
Ole of having a purported homosexual relationship with Justice
Minister Roger Kusch (CDU), and of inappropriately combining his
private and official lives.
Beust felt compelled to fire Schill and suddenly claimedin
a remark that reflected badly on his own judgmentthat Schills
character was not suited for the post of interior
minister. Nevertheless, Beust continued to maintain his coalition
with Schills party.
The reason for this is simple: in essence, there were no fundamental
political differences between Beust, Kusch and Schill. Beust and
Kusch stood, in exactly the same spirit as Schill, for a strengthening
of police and state power. Kusch made a name for himself as a
fervent advocate for harsher forms of imprisonment. In the autumn
of 2002, the representatives of the CDU and FDP adopted one of
the laws demanded by the Schill party, dramatically expanding
the right of the secret services to carry out bugging operations.
The Hamburg law went far beyond the security measures implemented
by Germans interior minister Otto Schily and allowed the
secret services to operate completely unhindered.
When tens of thousands of school students demonstrated against
the Iraq war early last year, Beust and Schill let the police
loose on the peaceful demonstration with water cannon and batons.
During the election campaign, these events were carefully suppressed.
The placards of the CDU even descended below the level of the
lowbrow Bild tabloid newspaper. Apart from the laughable
blond tuft of Carl-Friedrich Arp Freiherr von Beust (his full
name, which he shortened when he was 18 years old), the CDU proclaimed
the three most important messages: Michel, Alster, Ole
(Michelafter the Hamburg St. Michel church; Alsterafter
the river running through the centre of Hamburg). Only the Free
Democrats were in a position to top this. Their placards exclaimedin
all seriousnessOlé! Olé! Only with the
FDP!
What politics does Ole von Beust actually embody? His own party
friends cannot even answer this question coherently. It would
be perhaps appropriate to call him the man without qualities.
Similar to his CDU boss Angela Merkel, he appears to resemble
a blank screen that offers the ideal surface
for reflecting different and diffuse political
aims. This type of politician, who appears liberal, procrastinating
and noncommittal, refrains from developing his own political considerations
and conceptions. Political principles are alien to him. Someone
like Ole von Beust can today govern with the right-wing populist
Ronald Schill; tomorrow make a few tolerant and liberal remarks
and as he did repeatedly during the election campaign, gaze fondly
at the Greens; and then, a day lateras had already been
decidedprivatise all public hospitals.
Ole von Beust probably became a politician because his father
Achim-Helge Freiherr von Beust was the first president of the
Young Union (youth movement of the CDU) in Hamburg, and then from
1954 to 1980 mayor of the suburb of Wandsbek. In 1977, the young
Beust effectively inherited the Young Union presidency from his
father, and in 1994 eventually took over the party presidency
in Wandsbek, the CDU branch with the most members in Hamburg.
In September 1997, he was elected the partys leading candidate
for the state elections. Since then, there has not been the least
trace of any sort of political successes or highlights for which
he could claim credit.
After the Hamburg election, German Chancellor Gerhard Schröder
said that despite popular opposition his party would maintain
its active dismantling of the social welfare system. The Hamburg
election, he conceded, indicated that the reform process had negative
consequences, but then he added: We will continue the reforms,
because there exists no other sensible alternative.
See Also:
Germany: Government seals
the fate of the welfare state
[4 February 2004]
Germany: Hamburg elections
deliver a serious warning
[2 October 2001]
Germany: Extreme right
could make gains in upcoming elections in Hamburg
[14 September 2001]
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