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Germany: SPD chairman resigns in midst of grand coalition
talks
By Peter Schwarz
3 November 2005
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Less than six months after German Chancellor Gerhard Schröder
decided to call early federal elections, despite the fact that
his governing Social Democratic Party (SPD)-Green Party coalition
retained a parliamentary majority, the head of the SPD, Franz
Müntefering, has resigned from his post as chairman and thrown
the party into a deep crisis.
The same motive underlies both the early election and Münteferings
abrupt resignation: Schröder and Müntefering want to
make clear that they will not tolerate the least trace of opposition
to their pro-business policies, and prefer to hand over power
to the right-wing parties rather than accept criticism from within
the ranks of their own party.
Müntefering announced his resignation following a vote
in the party executive Monday, in which 23 executive members nominated
the former Young Socialist leader Andrea Nahles as the partys
new general secretary. Münteferings own preferred candidate,
Kajo Wasserhövel, received just 14 votes. Müntefering
then broke off the meeting, met with the party presidium and told
baffled executive members that he would not serve as chairman
at the party conference due to be held in two weeks.
One would think that the election for a leading post of a candidate
who does not have the official approval of the party chairman
is a normal democratic procedure. But this is not the case in
the SPD.
Müntefering reacted by resigning his post, and the press
angrily attacked those who had dared to vote against his candidate.
Their behaviour was described as Harakiri, an impulse
for self-destruction, and the victory of the irrational
over the rational, and the proceedings were depicted as
a putsch and a rebellion against the head of
the SPDmerely because a majority of the executive
in a secret vote came to a decision not corresponding to the wishes
of the party chairman.
This despite the fact that Nahles is anything but a political
opponent of Müntefering. The 35-year-old graduate in literary
studies has been supported all these years by Müntefering
and is very grateful, as she readily acknowledged
in a recent interview with the Süddeutsche Zeitung newspaper.
Nahles is regarded as belonging to the partys left wing.
But this left wing has supported every decision of the party leadership
for yearsmilitary interventions in Yugoslavia and Afghanistan,
the anti-welfare Agenda 2010 programme, and now the grand coalition
of conservative parties and the SPD.
We all want to see the grand coalition succeed. A party
cannot conduct agitation against a government it supports,
Nahles told the Süddeutsche Zeitung shortly before
the executive meeting. In fact, her leftness is limited
to occasional and very softly spoken verbal criticism.
The lefts have established an alliance with the
so-called Networkers within the SPDa collection
of careerist young functionaries assembled around the figure of
the former prime minister of Lower Saxony, Sigmar Gabriel. According
to media reports, the lefts made a deal with the Networkers
to support Gabriels claim to the post of environment minister
if his supporters agreed to vote for Nahles.
In Spiegel online, political scientist Franz Walter
describes the Networkers as follows: This group in the SPD
parliamentary faction came together in 1998 in order to establish
a cosy informal atmosphere and structure of patronage for an internal
party faction. It has never had a common political platform, a
binding programme or even a stringent conceptual strategy for
a changed SPD after Schröder.... The common basis was being
young and the aspiration in future to climb the ranks of the political
establishmentto be more precise: to be favourably accepted
by the latter. For this reason, the Networkers have
been regarded through the years pretty much as opportunists lacking
any principles.
Most executive members voted for Nahles because they feared
the organisational decline of the party would continue if it were
perceived as nothing more than the tail of the grand coalition
led by Chancellor Angela Merkel (Christian Democratic Union, CDU).
Münteferings candidate for the post of general secretary,
Kajo Wasserhövel, is regarded as his right-hand man and a
relatively apolitical functionary. His job was to keep a tight
rein on the party for a chairman who already has his hands full
as designated vice chancellor and labour minister in the future
government.
In a letter announcing his resignation to party members, Müntefering
declared, I wanted to be chairman of this party and the
vice chancellor of this government.... To serve the party and
govern at the same time is never easy, not least in a grand coalition....
Therefore, I proposed a particular form of work for the top ranks
of the party leadership, and, in addition, proposed Kajo Wasserhövel
for general secretary.
For her part, Nahles insisted on the necessity for a political
general secretary, who not only assured that the party closed
ranks behind the government, but also worked to build up
a reserve of ideals in the coming years and made the
organisational preparations for a majority in 2009the
date for the next scheduled federal elections. She remarked that
there should not merely be Berlin-centred perspectives,
the party also had to open itself up to the arena of civil
society.
In other words: Nahles insists that the party maintain a certain
distance from the day-to-day work of the governmenteven
if only to prevent the further loss of members and voters and
more defections to the Left Party of Gregor Gysi and Oskar Lafontaine.
She found support for this line in the party executive, where
for some time frustration has accumulated with the authoritarian
leadership style employed by Schröder and Müntefering.
In particular, Schröders decision in favour of early
electionsa decision made without warning or consultation,
and then justified with the argument that the chancellor could
no longer rely on support from his own rankswas a source
of disquiet.
According to a report in Spiegel online, it was
the contribution made by Schröder at the executive meeting
that tipped the balance and led to a majority in favour of Nahles.
Schröder spoke out in favour of Wasserhövel: That
was not helpful, one of those in attendance declared later.
It only served to remind the executive of how the party had been
bled dry by Schröders leadership style.
The vote was also a signal of self-assertion against the
seven years under Schröder.
The revolt against Münteferings candidate was not
aimed at his right-wing policies or the grand coalition, but rather
at his authoritarian style of leadership. This conclusion was
also drawn by FAZ.net, which wrote: The support which
Ms. Nahles received was not merely due to her person or her political
leanings. It had much more to do with Münteferings
leadership style, which is increasingly perceived as authoritarian
within the party leadership, where there have been accusations
that Müntefering does not consult and carries out his decisions
in a single-handed manner.
Even such a limited form of protest was too much for Müntefering.
He will not, and cannot, tolerate any criticism from within the
ranks of the party, even with regard to organisational questions.
The reason is the package of cuts and savings that is currently
being prepared by the grand coalition.
It was no coincidence that on the very day Müntefering
announced his resignation, a meeting took place between leading
figures of the grand coalition that discussed forthcoming budget
cuts totalling 35 billion euros. There has since been a curtain
of silence over the results of the talks.
The cuts will inevitably provoke anger and opposition from
SPD voters and ordinary party members, and under such conditions
any differences within the party could quickly escalate into explosive
conflicts. In this respect, the authoritarian style of leadership
by which Müntefering disciplines the party is an anticipation
of the authoritarian methods that will be employed by the grand
coalition to suppress public opposition to its policies.
Münteferings announcement of his resignation was
entirely effective in silencing his critics inside the party.
Barely was the news out when the right wing in the party began
to angrily attack those members of the executive who had dared
to support Nahles. Some of the more modest accusations included
gigantic stupidity, incomprehensible and
immature.
Those who backed Nahles took turns before the television cameras
to reassure: This is not what we wanted. If they had
known that Müntefering would resign, they would have cast
their votes differently, they declared.
Nahles herself stated that she might withdraw her candidacy
for the general secretary post at the upcoming party conference,
and the environment minister, Heidemarie Wieczorek-Zeul, who is
regarded as a leading player in the campaign to back Nahles, announced
she would give up her post as deputy party chair to make it available
as an alternative for Nahles.
It is already quite clear that the party conference due to
take place on the weekend of November 12-13 will pay homage to
Müntefering, and no one will dare utter a word of criticism.
There is already an Internet campaign underway to persuade Müntefering
to stay in office.
He has since declared that he will continue to lead coalition
negotiations with all his energy and will take over
the posts of vice chancellor and labour minister as planned. It
seems unlikely that Müntefering will back down on his resignation,
and a replacement for the party chairmanship has already been
found in the person of the prime minister of the state of Brandenburg,
Matthias Platzeck.
In his letter to party members, Müntefering wrote, The
rejuvenation of the leadership of the SPD is now taking place
somewhat earlier than I thought. I will assist in making this
succeed.
There is no shortage of ambitious candidates among the Networkers
who will prove willing and able to serve under Müntefering
and the grand coalition. The rejuvenation of the leadership
of the SPD could rapidly prove to be a form of modernisation
along the lines of Tony Blairs British New Labour.
Even if the SPD is able to resolve the current crisis, Münteferings
resignation shows the fragility of the grand coalition. It shows
signs of breaking apart even before it has formally come into
being. While speculation was rife following Münteferings
resignation, another key figure in the grand coalition, the chairman
of the Christian Social Union (CSU), Edmund Stoiber, announced
he was throwing in the towel and would return to his party stronghold
in Bavaria.
Stoiber, who had hesitated for weeks before deciding to take
over a ministerial post in Berlin, announced on Tuesday that he
was definite in his decision to remain prime minister
of Bavaria. A CSU party colleague, Michael Glos, has been announced
as his replacement for the post of federal economics minister.
Stoiber justified his own resignation by citing Münteferings
resignation as SPD party chairman. This, Stoiber declared, had
changed the situation in the SPD. Müntefering was an authority
and central figure in the grand coalition, and this meant
the basis for his own entry into government no longer existed.
The real reason for Stoibers resignation is that he confronts
crucial problems in Bavaria very similar to those now confronting
the SPD. His party regularly notched up election victories of
50 or 60 percent, which means he has enjoyed support from broad
layers of working people who will be hit hard by the policies
of the future grand coalition.
Within days of Stoiber making the decision to join the government
in Berlin, a struggle had begun in the CSU for his succession
as prime minister of Bavaria between Stoibers head of chancellery,
Erwin Huber, regarded as a protagonist of neo-liberal policies,
and the states interior minister, Günter Beckstein,
who advocates an authoritarian state that retains certain social
responsibilities. This struggle has now been set aside by Stoibers
return to Bavaria.
Stoiber is also alleged to be unhappy with the chancellor designate,
Angela Merkel, who backed down on her promise that he could take
over an enlarged super ministry comprising economics
and technology.
See Also:
Big business lobbies step
up pressure on Germanys grand coalition
[29 October 2005]
Germanys grand coalition
leaders suppress internal party discussion
[27 October 2005]
Germanys new parliament:
democratic fig leaf of an authoritarian government
[21 October 2005]
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