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: Germany
New name, old program
German Party of Democratic Socialism renames itself The
Left Party
By Lucas Adler
25 July 2005
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Earlier this month, delegates at a special congress held in
Berlin decided to change the name of their party from the Party
of Democratic Socialism (PDS) to The Left Party.
The renaming is first and foremost a concession to the PDSs
new running mate, the Election Alternative (WASG), which made
a change of name a condition for running a joint slate in the
elections for the German parliament (Bundestag) expected in September.
Since German electoral law does not permit electoral alliances,
the two parties were required to arrive at an agreement to permit
candidates of the WASG to stand on the electoral lists of the
Party of Democratic Socialism.
The Party of Democratic Socialism and the WASG intend to fully
unify during the next parliamentary session. The WASGs demand
that its ally change its name was aimed at rebutting claims that
it was merely being assimilated into the PDS. However, any comparison
of membership figures for the two organisations (85,000 for the
Party of Democratic Socialism, 4,000 members for the WASG) makes
clear that a name change alone cannot preclude this danger.
For the Party of Democratic Socialism, the alliance with the
WASG offers the prospect of the PDS finally obtaining political
influence in west Germany, where it has never been able to acquire
a proper foothold. The name change also offers the PDS a welcome
opportunity to establish an artificial divide between the demands
and policies of the new Left Party and the policy
and practice of the old PDS.
The renaming of the SED (Socialist Unity Partythe Stalinist
ruling party of former East Germany) as the Party of Democratic
Socialism in 1989 was the first attempt by the PDS to rid itself
of past political ballast. The PDS has, however, remained true
to its Stalinist roots and sought to quash any independent movement
of the working class.
While the party is currently loudly criticising the anti-social
policies of Germanys ruling SPD-Green Federal Government,
it has been closely involved in the implementation and extension
of precisely the same policies in those regions where it is part
of the government. A brief glimpse of conditions in the German
capital Berlingoverned for more than three years by a coalition
of the Social Democratic Party (SPD) and the PDSspeaks volumes
in this regard.
More than half a million citizens of Berlin (of approximately
3.5 million inhabitants) live below the official poverty line
and are forced to survive on an income of less than 600 euros
per month. The official unemployment ratio is around 20 percent,
and approaches 30 percent in some districts of the city.
The wages and salaries of public service workers and others
employed by the city council are under permanent attack. Within
the past few months, the city council in collaboration with the
trade unions forced through a 10 percent wage cut for city transit
workers. At the same time, communal facilities, including childcare
provision and education, have been subjected to a continual onslaught
of cuts and increased fees. As a result, there is widespread anger
and discontent over the PDSs role in the city.
Against this background, it comes as no real surprise that
this latest name change was supported by a large majority of congress
delegates74.6 percent. Little effort was required to persuade
those in attendance to ditch the name PDS, and there was little
in the way of real political debateeither in the run-up
to the conference or at the congress itself.
Speeches by delegates and party leaders at the special congress
were essentially limited to presenting the favorable odds of wining
parliamentary representation for an alliance of the Party of Democratic
Socialism and WASG. Opinion polls currently estimate that up to
11 percent of voters in west Germany and 30 percent in the east
of the country would be prepared to vote for the alliance. This
would make the Left Party the organisation with the largest electoral
support in the east.
With the crisis of parliamentary democracy in Germany intensifying
and the influence of social democracy significantly weakened,
the Party of Democratic Socialism now feels obliged to extend
its role as guarantor of civil order in the east to Germany as
a whole. To this end, party delegates welcomed the chance to sweep
some past sins under the carpet and pose as a party making a fresh
start.
The impression was given that the Left Party represents something
new in German politics that should at least be given a chance
in the Bundestag. In reality, the same decrepit and discredited
organisation lies behind the new name. As the ruling party in
the former German Democratic Republic (East Germany), the SED
ruthlessly suppressed working class opposition. In its PDS incarnation,
this party emerged during the period of German unification as
the most important political force for diverting working class
opposition and thereby securing civic order in the east of the
country. Now, in the form of the Left Party, it strives to play
the same role on the national stageunder conditions in which
the Social Democratic Party of Chancellor Gerhard Schröder
lacks the authority to do so.
The only real change is that the PDS has opened up its ranks
to a group of former SPD members and trade union bureaucrats from
western Germany who have long shared the PDSs antipathy
to any independent political movement of the working class.
See Also:
PDS, unions impose wage cut on Berlin
transit workers
[19 July 2005]
Germany: political
double talkthe PDS and the Hartz IV welfare
reforms
[20 August 2004]
Ex-Stalinists in German
PDS back social cuts
[18 March 2003]
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