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Germanys new parliament: democratic fig leaf of an authoritarian
government
By Ulrich Rippert
21 October 2005
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On Tuesday, the new German parliament (Bundestag) met in constituent
session. In its first official business, the 614 deputies elected
Christian Democratic Union (CDU) politician Norbert Lammert as
parliamentary president.
According to protocol, after Federal President Horst Köhler,
also a CDU member, the president of the Bundestag is the second
highest representative of the German state. With the expected
election of Angela Merkel as chancellor, the CDU will occupy three
of the countrys most important public offices.
In his inaugural speech, Lammert stressed the political significance
of parliament as the heart of democracy. However,
he continued, the Bundestag would have to be especially conscious
of its responsibilities in light of the large majority commanded
by the incoming grand coalition of the Social Democratic Party
(SPD) and Christian Democratic Union/Christian Social Union (CDU/CSU).
Lammert told the assembled deputies that the Bundestag was not
there to rubber-stamp government decisions, but was,
rather, the governments task master.
This all sounded like whistling in the dark. In the coming
legislative term, the deputies, the parties and their parliamentary
groupings will command far less political power and organizational
room for manoeuvre than before. A grand coalition comprising the
SPD and CDU/CSU will hold 448 seats in parliament, a majority
of nearly three-quarters.
In contrast to the outgoing coalition of the SPD and Green
Party, which could be swayed by the opposition of a handful of
deputies from its own side, the coming government will be able
to survive the opposition of over a hundred members of its own
parliamentary groupings. This signifies a clear shift of
weight from the legislative to the executive, as the
Süddeutche Zeitung commented.
As in everyday life, one shameful act in politics often leads
to another. On July 1, when the Bundestag duly supported SPD Chancellor
Gerhard Schröders wish to pass a motion of no-confidence
in his administration, despite knowing full well that the SPD-Green
coalition possessed a small but secure parliamentary majority,
the deputies supported a political manoeuvre aimed at precipitating
early elections in order to establish a strong, authoritarian
government.
Only two delegates opposed the no-confidence motion, warning
against such arbitrary abuse of democratic norms. The great majority
of parliamentarians subordinated themselves to the chancellors
diktat, and thereby gave way in an important question of parliamentary
and democratic rights. The words of warning from the new parliamentary
president that the Bundestag should not become a rubber-stamp
for the government amount to moralising balm on an already committed
sin.
Parliaments self-enacted diminution of power already
occurred in the summer. The fact that afterwards the federal president
and the German constitutional court both approved the parliamentary
manoeuvre does not make it any better, but shows how deeply the
ruling elite has broken with its own legal norms.
In view of mounting popular opposition to increasingly drastic
social cuts, leading employers associations had demanded
that the Gordian knot be cut, and Chancellor Schröder obeyed
in the form of early elections. These completely undemocratic
and illegitimate actions are now shaping the formation of the
new government and its relationship with parliament.
While Bundestag President Lammert calls parliament the heart
of democracy, the newly elected deputies have no influence on
the formation of the government, let alone the formulation of
its programme. All the important decisions were negotiated behind
closed doors by the party chairmen. The media has been better
informed than the Bundestag deputies.
Going forward, the deputies and the parliamentary groupings
will have little say. Contentious questions that cannot be resolved
inside the cabinet will be dealt with in the coalition committee.
The role of parliament will be limited to agreeing to the finished
results. This does not mean that parliamentary debates will be
curtailed. It is often the case that the scale and volume of the
parliamentary battle of words stands in inverse proportion to
the actual power and influence of the deputies.
In terms of numbers, with a total of 166 seats, the parliamentary
opposition is extremely small. Politically, it is impotent. None
of the three parliamentary groupings that stand outside the government
partiesthe Free Democratic Party (FDP), the Greens and the
Left Partyare in principle opposed to the grand coalition.
FDP leader Guido Westerwelle announced there would be a hard
opposition, albeit from the right. The free market
liberals see their task as magnifying the pressure of the employers
associations on the government, and thereby accelerating the redistribution
of social wealth from the bottom to the top by means of aggressive
social cuts and the liberalisation of labour laws,
on the one hand, and tax breaks for the wealthy, on the other.
Immediately after the election, the Greens played a key role
in supporting CDU leader Merkels bid to become chancellor.
If they had refused to hold exploratory discussions with the CDU/CSU,
the CDU chairman would have come under strong pressure from inside
her party. Instead, the Greens not only signalled their willingness
to hold talks, but announced that in future they would cooperate
more closely with the CDU/CSU.
The resignation of Joschka Fischer as Green Party leader sent
a clear signal in this direction. Last year, the Green Party and
its government members had stressed that they regarded their main
task to be supporting the SPD and the Agenda 2010
programme of social cuts, thereby enabling the government to withstand
the pressure of protests being mounted by working people.
The Left Party, which often talks about opposition, is thoroughly
conformist in its practice. In the state legislatures of Mecklenburg
Pomerania and Berlin, this party not only implemented social cuts,
but also praised the SPD after the elections for supposedly blocking
the worst in its discussions with the CDU/CSU.
If anything, the opposite is the case. Peer Steinbrück,
designated by the SPD as finance minister in the grand coalition,
is among the most energetic political figures in calling for austerity
measures and has gone so far as to suggest the privatisation of
Germanys autobahns (motorways). Meanwhile, top representatives
of business and industry are posing new and more far-reaching
demands, to put pressure on the incoming government.
A few days ago, the chairman of the Federal Union of German
Employers Associations, Dieter Hundt, presented a list of
demands under the heading: The Expectations of German Business
in the Coalition Negotiations. As well as the fundamental
reorganization of social security and the fastest possible
lowering of ancillary wage costs to under 40 percent,
the document called for a further cut in the corporation tax and
the abolition of death duties, the lifting of protections against
unfair dismissal in businesses with fewer than 20 employees, measures
to make labour law and collective agreements more flexible,
and a hike in the retirement age to 67.
The tensions and open conflicts that have occurred in recent
days between Merkel, Edmund Stoiber (CSU) and others over the
selection of ministers in the new government and the suitability
of various candidates for the position of chancellor do not revolve
around the issue of implementing welfare and social cuts, as the
Left Party claims. There is substantial agreement between the
parties on this score.
Fierce internal disputes are a characteristic of every authoritarian
regime which functions in a manner completely removed from the
general population and which rests on a narrow social base drawn
from the economic elite and the state apparatus. The more the
parliamentary and democratic structures are gutted and serious
social disputes are suppressed, the more the conflicts within
the government grow and assume an explosive form.
See Also:
German: Interior Minister Schilys
parting shota blatant attack on freedom of the press
[20 October 2005]
What can be expected from Germanys
grand coalition?
[19 October 2005]
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