|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : Europe
: Germany
From Franz Müntefering to Mathias Platzeck
The German Social Democrats: on the way to New Labour
By Ulrich Rippert
10 November 2005
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email
the author
Last week the chairman of the Social Democratic Party (SPD),
Franz Müntefering, resigned from his post. Just as sudden
as the announcement of his resignation was the naming of his replacement.
The change from Müntefering to Matthias Platzeck occurred
within the space of little more than 24 hours.
Neither Münteferings resignation nor the nomination
of Platzeck occurred democratically. Müntefering abruptly
left his post after the party leadership opposed his nomination
for the position of general secretary. Platzeck was then chosen
within a tiny group of party heads and named as Münteferings
successor. The party membership had absolutely no say in either
decision. The coming SPD national party congress in mid-November
will not alter these developments, even though the delegates could
theoretically reject the decisions that have already been publicly
made.
Only one and a half years have passed since Franz Müntefering
took over the party chairmanship from German Chancellor Gerhard
Schröder. Schröder himself occupied the position for
barely five years. The speed with which the SPD uses up its chairpersons
is a barometer of its political crisis and decline.
In the first four decades since the end of World War II the
SPD had only three chairmen: Kurt Schumacher (1946-1952), Erich
Ollenhauer (1952-1963) and Willy Brandt (1964-1987). The following
18 years saw August Bebels famous timepiecewhich since
the death of the legendary party leader has been passed on to
each successive party chairmanchange hands eight times:
to Hans-Jochen Vogel, Björn Engholm, Johannes Rau, Rudolf
Scharping, Oskar Lafontaine, Gerhard Schröder, Franz Müntefering
and now Matthias Platzeck.
The constant wear and tear on those holding the partys
leading position is bound up with a fundamental change of the
party itself. Of course, the SPD had already broken with a socialist
perspective nearly 100 years ago, when in 1914 it voted for war
credits for the First World War. In 1959, at its national conference
in Godesberg, the party cut all programmatic ties to the workers
movement and characterised itself as a peoples party.
Despite this, until the 1980s and 1990s, the party continued to
put forward a social-reformist programme which was based on retaining
a certain degree of social equality.
Since then, under the pressure of globalisation, employer organisations
have been clambering for a rigorous dismantling of social services
and welfare on the one side and more tax privileges for companies
and the wealthy on the other. During the SPDs time in office
it caved in to this pressure and transformed itself into a party
for big business. Its policies since then have provoked growing
resistance in the population and among party members. In the past
15 years around 300,000 membersalmost one third of the membershiphave
resigned.
The suppression of inner-party discussion and democracy, the
autocratic leadership style of Schröder and Münteferingwho
have repeatedly confronted party bodies with ultimatums and whose
decisions were discussed only within the smallest circles at the
top of the partyalong with their refusal to tolerate any
dissension, cannot be separated from the implementation of the
anti-social policies of Agenda 2010 and Hartz IV.
Why Platzeck?
As the president of the German state of Brandenburg, which
surrounds Berlin, Matthias Platzeck had up until now received
little attention in political circles and in the media, even though
he had played an increasing role in the SPD leadership for some
years.
Platzeck grew up in the old East Germany (GDR) and studied
biochemistry in Ilmenau and Karl-Marx-Stadt (now Chemnitz). When
the Berlin Wall came down in 1989 he was a founding member of
the Green League in the GDR and a year later became minister without
a specific responsibility in the cabinet of president Hans Modrow,
the leader of the Stalinist state party, the SED (Socialist Unity
Party). Running on the state list of the Bündnis 90 group,
he entered the Brandenburg parliament. Platzeck rejected the merger
of Bündnis 90 with the West German Green Party and in 1995
became a member of the SPD and environment minister in the state
cabinet of Manfred Stolpe (SPD). When Stolpe resigned in the summer
of 2002, Platzeck became Brandenburg president.
During the Brandenburg state elections last year, Platzeck
vehemently defended Schröders Agenda 2010 and Hartz
IV policies. He held his ground even as a rotten egg was thrown
at him during a campaign speech. He described the massive cuts
in social programs as the only way to clean up the social
system. At the same time he demanded more discussion within
the SPD and argued that these policies could be implemented not
administratively, but only through debate.
Although the SPD lost votes in the Brandenburg elections, it
remained the strongest party and joined forces with the Christian
Democratic Party (CDU) to form a coalition government. Platzeck
has for many years now worked closely and reliably
(as he constantly puts it) with the CDU interior minister, Jörg
Schönbohm. Schönbohm, a former army general, belongs
to the right wing of the Union parties. He presents himself as
a robust law-and-order man. Last spring, Schönbohm used the
tragic case of a multiple child murder as the pretext for an anticommunist
tirade. Platzeck defended his coalition partner and rejected calls
for Schönbohms resignation.
Platzeck, however, is not just the man of the hour because
he can work with the right-wingers in the CDU and has experience
in a grand coalition. He is also someone who proposes
a fundamental change in the SPD. One week after the German federal
election in September, he wrote a commentary in the German business
newspaper Handelsblatt under the title The new Social
Democracy. Platzeck wrote that the election result was an
historic break. He argued that the result contradicted
those who said that the government had no mandate for its
reform policies of Agenda 2010.
Platzeck wrote: Each and every vote for the SPD in this
election means a clear vote for a social democratic policy of
courageous reform. This much is clear: those who cast a free vote
for Gerhard Schröder and German Social Democracy on 18 September
2005 did not do so in spite of, but because it paved the way forward
for a decisive renewal of our country.
One feels like replying: Lie Mister, but do so in moderation!
Such a falsification of the facts is really an audacious act.
In the previous 11 German state elections over the last several
years, and in the European elections in 2004, the SPD has suffered
a dramatic loss of votes. Hundreds of thousands of people have
demonstrated on the streets against Agenda 2010 and its program
of social cuts; tens of thousands of SPD members have resigned
in disgust. It was only under the impact of the newly formed Left
Party that Schröder demanded more justice and
employed election talk against his own policies. The CDU on the
other hand demanded an increase in the Value Added Tax (VAT),
reductions in wages and pensions and the introduction of an across-the-board
flat-tax rate. These two developments combined changed the election
scales. Every serious analysis of the election made clear that
voters voted against Merkel, the CDU leader, and not
for Schröderand absolutely not for Agenda
2010.
Platzeck and Merkel
Although Franz Müntefering wants to become employment
minister and vice-chancellor in a coalition government, the leadership
axis of German politics has now become Merkel-Platzeck. For many
it seems either coincidence or grotesque that 15 years after the
collapse of the GDR two of its former citizens lead the countrys
two biggest parties. Media commentaries refer to the similarities
of their personalities and their political biographies and in
general exaggerate superficialities.
The reasons lie much deeper, and are bound up with the character
of German reunification in 1989-90. Before this event, both Matthias
Platzeck and Angela Merkel had little to do with politics. They
were taken in by the movement at the time and politiciseda
movement that was more or less united on destroying all social
and cultural institutions of GDR society and subjecting them to
the profit interests of the large West German and international
business groups.
In the first weeks of reunification, millions of people participated
in demonstrations against the hated Stalinist regime, striving
for a democratic and social renewal in the East and West. However,
the decades-long suppression of any independent initiative of
the working class in the GDR created a political vacuum that right-wing
anticommunist demagogues were able to exploit. The demand for
freedom and democracy was used as an ideological cover for the
restoration of capitalism and the destruction of all social and
progressive achievements.
It was under these conditions that Merkel and Platzneck began
their political careers and quickly climbed the ranks of their
respective parties. None of them had the slightest scruples when
it came to implementing policies in the interests of businesses
against those of society.
While many West German politicians, above all the older ones,
are thoroughly conscious of the fact that social achievements
and services were partly gained through social conflicts and class
struggle and therefore have deep roots in the population, Merkel
and Platzeck are not familiar with these experiences. Social resistance,
strikes, class struggles and even local protests were violently
suppressed by the GDR regime. Merkel and Platzeck have no inhibitions
about implementing business-friendly policies. Under their leadership
a grand coalition could rapidly develop into an authoritarian
regime.
The Network
The quick change at the top of the SPD from Müntefering
to Platzeck is closely bound up with a grouping inside the SPD
known as the Network. Along with the Seeheimer
Circle, in which the right wing of the SPD is organised,
and the Parliamentary Left group, there exists this
third internal SPD grouping. It was formed in 1992 by young parliamentarians
with the aim of promoting their political careers. The media characterises
them as power-hungry and lacking any programmatic content.
Since its formation it has quickly expanded. It calls itself
the Post-68ers or the young generation for a
new SPD. It emphasises its pragmatic and undogmatic
approach to economic developments and political tasks. According
to this group, the ideology of the nineteenth century cannot resolve
the problems in the twenty-first.
What this means concretely is seen by a declaration of the
council of this Network on May 23 this year, one day after the
SPDs dramatic state election loss in North Rhine-Westphalia
and German Chancellor Gerhard Schröders announcement
of new federal elections. The declaration demands: Not to
give up but to complete the reform course! The new federal
elections were supported as the right consequence.
It went on: There cannot be a discussion about the partys
orientation. Those who wish to question the SPDs reform
policies of the last years, or to instigate an internal party
squabble over posts, damage the party and the country!
Nevertheless, the group is systematically playing its own game
of party-position chess and already occupies key state and federal
positions at the leadership level. In order to get one of its
followers appointed minister in the planned grand coalition, the
Networkers struck a deal with the Parliamentary Left. The agreement
meant that the Parliamentary Left would withdraw its candidate
for environment minister and support that of the Networkers, Siegmar
Gabriel. In return, the Networkers would support Andrea Nahles,
the Parliamentary Lefts candidate for the position of general
secretary.
The first half of this agreement went ahead as planned. With
the help of the left, Gabriel became a candidate minister. However,
after Nahles was elected general secretary by a surprising majority
with the support of the Networkers, Müntefering resigned.
Nahles came under attack as the king murderer.
Just one day lateragain with heavy support from the Post-68ersMatthias
Platzeck was named as the future SPD chairman; he then demanded
the right to put forward his own nomination as general secretary.
Hours later the partys executive committee unanimously voted
in Platzecks nominee, Hubertus Heil. The 33-year-old Heil
is a leading figure in the Network group. The coup was perfect.
The Networker obtained the partys key position.
Oskar Lafontaine, the former SPD chairman and now parliamentary
fraction chief of the new Left Party, said the election of Andrea
Nahles was a sign that the SPD leadership was making a turn to
the left. In an interview with the Süddeutsche Zeitung
newspaper he said: The SPD is looking for a new orientation.
It looks as though the majority of the leadership wanted to return
to policies that are based on social democratic principles.
Far from it. The opposite is the case. Nahles was used in a
calculated manoeuvre and placed in the position for a limited
time. At the same time, another member of the partys left,
Heidemarie Wieczorek-Zeul, who held a position in the partys
executive, was forced to resign. There are many signals that point
to the real character of the partys renewal,
and that is the one the Networkers are proclaiming, one similar
in character to New Labour under Tony Blair in Britain.
See Also:
Germany: SPD chairman resigns in midst
of grand coalition talks
[3 November 2005]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |