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Germany: Monday protests continue against Hartz IV
60,000 demonstrate in Leipzig
By our reporters
4 September 2004
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Protest demonstrations throughout Germany against social cuts
and the governments Hartz-IV measures continued for the
fifth week in a row. On Monday, August 30, tens of thousands took
to the streets in more than 200 towns and cities. In east German
towns, average attendance was in the thousands, with participation
somewhat less in the west of the country.
The biggest demonstration by far took place in Leipzig, where
a total of 60,000 marched from the citys Nicholas Church
to the central Augustusplatz. In Magdeburg, where the protests
first began in July, the demonstration was reckoned to be between
3,000 and 6,000, significantly lower than the week before. According
to organisers, an estimated 15,000 took part in protests in the
German capital, Berlin.
As was the case in previous weeks, the protests were dominated
by those who will be most directly affected by the new measuresthe
unemployed, social welfare recipients and pensioners. However,
many ordinary workers, including office and self-employed workers,
alarmed at the prospect of imminent unemployment, also joined
the protests.
Conflicts within the organising bodies led to divisions between
the demonstrations in a number of cities. This past Monday, as
in the previous week, Berlin witnessed two demonstrations independently
making their way to the same endpointthe headquarters of
the German Social Democratic Party (SPD) in the German capital.
That evening, the SPD executive was holding a meeting inside the
building. One of the Berlin demonstrations was called by a coalition
of groups comprising the Party of Democratic Socialism (PDS),
Attac and a handful of trade unionists, which gathered
in front of the citys town hall. The other demonstration
assembled in the central Alexanderplatz and was led by an organisation
dominated by a German Maoist group (MLPD). In the western metropolis
of Frankfurt-Main and many other German towns, demonstrators also
concentrated their protests against the local headquarters of
the SPD.
In a number of cities supporters of the World Socialist
Web Site distributed a political statement by the Socialist
Equality Party (Partei für Soziale GleichheitPSG),
which posed the connection between the Hartz IV measures and the
crisis of international capitalism. The leaflet was received with
considerable interest. [See The
Hartz IV measures in Germany and the international crisis of capitalism]
Berlin
People from all walks of life assembled in front of the Berlin
town hall for Mondays protestsmany of whom were affected
by the Hartz IV measures. The atmosphere was lively, and demonstrators
were keen to discuss. Participants exchanged information about
their own situation and were evidently seeking answers to their
problems. Only a few had illusions in the policies of the PDS
and the trade unions.
It was also clear, however, that lacking a clear perspective,
the protests threatened to peter out. The organisers were evidently
concerned with suppressing any real political discussion. As with
the previous Mondays demonstrations, the speeches given
were utterly shallow and limited to the demand for the withdrawal
of the Hartz IV measures. Trade unionists merely handed out plastic
whistles during the protests.
The participants we spoke to had hardly any illusions in the
old parties and bureaucracies, but at the same time were rarely
able to explain how the problems could be resolved. They had a
clear sense of social justice and were genuinely concerned over
social developments. Many participants agreed that it was necessary
to tackle the problems at their roots and change existing property
relations.
Marinka, a 50-year-old unemployed journalist, who will be personally
hit by the Hartz IV measures, said, The reform is unjust
and will do nothing to create new jobs. It is nothing other than
wage dumping. The entire package is based on lies. My contact
person at the unemployment agency has responsibility for 800 people
in the media branch alone. I do not how to stop the laws, but
I think it is necessary to try.
Eva, 56, is an unemployed saleswomen: I do want things
to change, because things have to change, but I do not have a
recipe for a solution. Everyone should unite. There is sufficient
wealth at hand; we live in a very wealthy country, it just has
to be distributed differently.
Max, 49, is an unemployed IT worker: They are just playing
at democracy and when that no longer works, they start shooting.
They have always worked this way. In 1989, people knew what they
wanted to begin with, but then they were forced to succumb to
the dictate of Western political parties. Today there is no alternative.
Udo Franzke, 50, is an unemployed planning engineer: Things
cannot go on this way with living conditions worsening for so
many families. From the first of January next year, I will no
longer be able to secure the future of my children.
Frankfurt-Main
In Frankfurt am Main the local trade union federation (DGB)
distanced itself from the protests. DGB head Harald Fiedler told
the Frankfurter Rundschau on August 27 that the DGB and
the SPD in Hessian were certainly not the right people to
contact.
The demonstrators were not impressed, however. The march increased
in size as it proceeded through the city centre. In front of the
SPD headquarters, protesters changed their slogan from Hartz
has to go! to Schröder has to go! The chants
became louder when a number of SPD functionaries showed their
faces at windows in the building.
Elise, a middle-aged participant who had a job contract for
three years, declared: I am taking part because I have to
reckon with unemployment in three years. It makes absolutely no
sense to wait until one is personally hit. By then it is too late.
Elise works advising unemployed young persons to find training
opportunities. When asked her view of the government, she said,
For me it is absolutely terrible, but I do not vote anymore
because there is no one to vote for. It makes no sense making
ones X every four years, nothing comes out of
it. The politicians live in worlds where they have lost all contact
with the peoplethe unemployed, young people and immigrant
workers. It is really just a world dominated by big business.
Lafontaine in Leipzig
The main speaker at the Leipzig demonstration was the former
chairman of the SPD, Oskar Lafontaine. When he appeared at the
beginning of the demonstration at the Nicholas Church, he was
immediately surrounded by a throng of reporters and camera teams.
Promptly an egg was thrown at Lafontaine, which only just missed
him and landed instead on a cameraman. Later, this incident was
taken up in all media reports to claim that Lafontaine had received
the same treatment in Leipzig as Chancellor Schröder, who,
just a few days previously, had been a target of public anger
and was also assaulted by eggs.
However, the situation was different. The few whistles that
accompanied the opening of his speech fell still as Lafontaine
began to repeat his criticisms of the policies of the German SPD-Green
Party government.
As he has done on other occasions, he accused the government
of deceiving the electorate and declared that it had lost any
trust on the part of the people. Schröders reform policy
was based on deceit and lies. This begins with the
choice of words used, he continued. Up until now the word reform
had been used to describe improvements to the social fabric, but
the government is currently striving to impose worsening living
standards for the large majority of the population. Whoever
understands by reforms just the dismantling of employment protection
provision, cuts in unemployment payments, and the doing away of
the system based on social solidarity should say so! Lafontaine
called out.
Reforms can only be made with the cooperation of the people,
not against them and also not over their heads, he
continued. It is wrong and stupid to impose the brunt of the reforms
on the socially weak while ignoring all those who possess large
incomes and wealth. To the applause of demonstrators, Lafontaine
cried out, We are one people! That means, however, that
all, I really mean all, have to contribute to social welfare costs,
adding that anything else is just pure cynicism.
Lafontaine called upon the demonstrators to oppose all of those
who aimed to whip up antagonisms between the populations of east
and west Germany. The divide in society, he maintained, is not
between east and west but between rich and poor.
While Lafontaine was able to stoke up the atmosphere at the
demonstration with his criticisms of the social and irresponsible
policies of the German government, what characterised his speech
was the claim that major social problems such as mass unemployment
and increasing levels of poverty could be overcome without questioning
the basis of capitalism as a whole.
In a speech lasting nearly 40 minutes, he said nothing about
the consequences of globalisation for production or the international
economic crisis. He failed to mention that the same policies of
dismantling welfare and social gains were being pursued by governments
all over the world.
Behind his sharp criticism of the Schröder government,
Lafontaine basically repeated the same illusory nostrums regarding
the possibilities of a social, humane and peaceful capitalism
that he propagated 15 years ago during the period of German reunification.
In fact, political reality over the last one and a half decades,
not just in Germany but worldwide, has been characterised by growing
unemployment, increasing poverty, and the dismantling of democratic
rights at home, together with growing militarism and war abroad,
which has served to rebuff such illusions.
In this respect, Lafontaine also failed to respond to another
important question: if another form of policy is possible under
existing social conditions, then why did he not use his position
of prominence five years ago to put it into practice? As German
finance minister and chairman of the biggest and most influential
party in the country, he was in a strategic position to do so.
Instead, he resigned his posts without ever giving an explanation.
He was, in fact, instrumental in opening the road for a policy
that he now criticises so vigorously. That is why Lafontaine lacks
credibility in Leipzigdespite the applause he received.
See Also:
The Hartz IV measures in Germany and
the international crisis of capitalism
[2 September 2004]
Germany: establishment parties
unite behind Hartz IV laws
[31 August 2004]
Germany: protests held in
over 140 towns and cities
[28 August 2004]
The Monday Demonstrations
in Germany1989 and today
[25 August 2004]
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