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Following the elections
The German Green Party: open to all offers
By Dietmar Henning
27 October 2005
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For the first time in twenty years, the German Green Party
held a national conference under conditions in which it had no
representation in either the federal government or any state government.
Following last months federal elections, the Social Democratic
Party (SPD) decided to ditch its Green Party partner in favour
of a grand coalition with the conservative Union partiesthe
Christian Democratic Union (CDU) and the Bavarian-based Christian
Social Union (CSU). The Greens, who emerged from the protest movement
of the late 1960s, have been so successful in making their way
through the countrys official political institutions that
they have made themselves superfluous.
Now the Green Party finds itself sitting, as they say,
between a rock and a hard place. In the new Bundestag
(parliament), its seats are placed between those of the Social
Democratic Party (SPD) and the Union parties. There, the Greens
form part of the loyal opposition. The only reason
the Greens are in opposition and not part of CDU leader Angela
Merkels government is that their votes are not needed to
form a majority in parliamentalthough for arithmetical,
and not political, reasons.
Therefore, in the manner of a grey-haired widow who has separated
from her husband after twenty years of marriage, the Greens are
looking for a new partner. The appropriate ad in the personals
section of a newspaper would read: Have modest demands,
open to all offers.
This was the most important message to emerge from the Greens
recent party conference, held on October 15 in Oldenburg. The
Greens want to return to powernot, however, with the SPD,
but rather with the CDU and CSU.
Party chief Reinhard Bütikofer told the approximately
700 assembled delegates that it would not suffice to base
ourselves solely on red [SPD]-green, if we want to form an organisational
majority. Bütikofer had already stated in an interview
with the Frankfurter Rundschau newspaper that it would
be stupid to attempt to form coalition governments with just one
side (by which he meant the SPD). In the immediate future,
we have to assess cases in the different states on their individual
merits and determine whether an agreement on political content
provides an avenue to step into office. We cannot afford to frivolously
miss opportunities to form a majority coalition.
The same point was made by Renate Künast, the former minister
for consumer affairs and the Greens current parliamentary
faction chairwoman. She told the conference that there are various
doors open to them. Whether we or others cross the threshold,
we will have to decide that at another time.
The main motion put forward for voting by the Greens
national committee contained the following maxim: Parliamentary
coalitions are to be measured by the extent to which green policies
can be advanced within them. After the end of the previous red-green
model, we are faced with a new start for green possibilities.
This means the possibility of various government constellations
if they can potentially implement green policies.
The another time that Künast spoke of will
be the various state elections due in 2006. In March, Baden-Württemberg,
Rhineland-Palatinate and Saxony Anhalt will hold elections, and
in September, Mecklenburg Vorpommern und Berlin. In the states
of Baden-Württemberg and in Berlin, leading state Green politicians
have been pressing for some time for a coalition with the CDU.
Immediately after the September federal elections, not a few
Green Party members spoke out in favour of a coalition with the
Union parties and the Free Democratic Party (FDP). The preliminary
discussions between the Union parties and the Greens, five days
after the election, held much promise.
Pleasant, open and honest, said Green Chairwoman
Claudia Roth, praising the talks that she and Co-Chairman Bütikofer
held with the chairpersons of the CDU and CSU, Angela Merkel and
Edmund Stoiber. The meeting had been an important historical
moment, declared Roth, who added that the talks involved
an effort at de-demonising.
After the good discussion, the premier of Bavaria
and designated federal economics minister, Stoiber, said he anticipated
a good atmosphere for the parliamentary work in the Bundestag.
He did not rule out Union-Green cooperation in one or another
state.
Officially, the leaderships of both camps claim that the Greens
and the Union parties are still too far apart. According to media
reports there is, particularly within the CSU membership, considerable
resistance towards an alliance with the Greens.
After the discussions between the two, however, Roth said that
Union-Green cooperation remains a perspective for tomorrow
and the day after tomorrow.
The Green Party leadership repeated both before and during
the party conference that the search for a new government
constellation was based on content before power.
However, the entire discussion at the Oldenburg conference revolved
around the question of how the Greens could maintain their power
options. There was absolutely no political discussion about
content.
The concept of developing a programme without being in
government to implement it was not liked by many, commented
the Frankfurter Rundschau. No one can remember a
time when delegates put forward so few motions.
According to the Tageszeitung newspaper, which has close
ties to the Greens: For the Greens in Lower Saxony Oldenburg,
there was no discussion on the content of its policies in government,
something it could fight over and hammer out. Likewise, there
was no discussion of the content of the oppositional policies
that it wishes to advance on its way to political office. Instead,
over 700 delegates had to discuss coalition possibilitiesthat
is, power. In other words: what they dont have.
The Greens content has over the course of
its history become so modest that it can come to an agreement
on it without any problem with all of the other capitalist parties:
the SPD, the Union parties and the free market FDP.
Since the Greens in 1985 first entered the Hesse state government,
they have one by one abandoned fundamental programmatic positions
and moved consistently to the right.
In 1998, immediately before its entry for the first time into
a federal government (in coalition with the SPD), the Green Party
approved the sending of German troops to a war zonein the
Balkans. This marked the first time such military action had been
taken by the German government since the end of the Second World
War.
In the ensuing years, these former pacifists sanctioned such
military operations on a world-wide basis. In foreign policy,
Germany took more international responsibility in the red-green
period, stated a motion of the Greens national committee
concerning the Greens seven-year period in government.
A similar evolution was to be seen in the partys social
policy. In the fields of employment and social policy we
were prepared to take on the necessary reforms that had been left
untouched in the previous 16 years [under CDU Chancellor Helmut
Kohl]. The pension system was made generationally fair. Previous
recipients of social welfare were made subject to qualifications
and mediation. This is how the motion stated the Greens
vehement support for the draconian Hartz laws and cuts in pensions.
The Greens have proven to be masters of euphemism and circumlocution.
Hence, foreign military interventions are transmogrified into
taking more international responsibility and social
cuts into securing generational fairness, while military
support for the war against Iraq becomes support for disarmament,
a 30-year operational guarantee for nuclear power stations becomes
the abandonment of nuclear energy, the raising of
consumer taxes (the mineral and oil tax) becomes ecological
taxation reform and the blockading of national borders against
refugees and immigrants becomes immigration regulation.
The mood at the Oldenburg conference was dominated by shock
and disappointment over the partys fall from government
power both federally and in the state of North Rhine-Westphalia.
The latter occurred in May with the defeat of the last remaining
SPD-Green state coalition government. And on 18 September, the
red-green government lost its majority at the federal level.
Green parliamentary member Winfried Hermann confessed: I
only now realise that I had come to depend on holding office more
than I had thought. Christian Ströbele, the only Green
candidate who was directly voted into the Bundestag, said: Opposition
while in office was more effective. Britta Haßelmann,
from North Rhine-Westphalia, entering the Bundestag for the first
time, bluntly declared: It will be brutally difficult.
Although the Greens seldom received more than ten percent of
the vote in elections, the party has participated in nine government
coalitions with the SPD since 1985. The longest terms, lasting
some ten years, were in North Rhine-Westphalia, Schleswig-Holstein
and Hesse. In 1998, it formed a coalition with the SPD for the
first time at the federal level.
With some 44,000 membersin 1998 it had 50,000the
Greens came to power and received numerous government posts in
the second half of the 1980s and 1990s and became, in the most
profound sense, a party of the state. It has scores of elected
representatives at all levels of government. Financially too,
the Greens have been dependent on the state for years.
The largest part of the partys yearly income of 26 million
euros in 2003 came directly or indirectly from state sources:
10 million from state support for political parties and 13 million
from donations, which in the main came from various Green federal
and state parliamentarians and local councillors. The financial
report of the Greens for 2003 showed assets of 21 million euros.
The Green Party itself is a more or less exact reflection of
the social layers it represents politically: a numerically decreasing
section of the middle class that has risen in the private sector
and, above all, in the public sector to become one of the better-paid
social layers. In contrast, the majority of the middle class count
among the losers under conditions of growing social polarisation.
Disillusioned and frustrated, and forced either into self-employment
or unemployment, these layers have increasingly turned their backs
on the Greens. The social climbers, the careerists and the better-paid,
which the Green Party represents, hardly differentiate themselves
in their political orientation from the free market
FDP (which has traditionally represented the better-off layers
of the urban middle class), the Union parties and the SPD.
Politically too, the Greens have lost their function under
the grand coalition. They are no longer required to obtain a majority
in parliament. The grand coalition will be flanked on the right
by the FDP and on the left by the Left Party. There is no requirement
for an opposition in the centre.
Being the smallest opposition party in the Bundestag, the Greens
will always be the last to be called to the speakers rostrum.
In other words, when all the journalists have already gone home,
prophesied the Süddeutsche Zeitung newspaper. Hardly
a prerequisite for successful oppositional work that is to be
taken seriously, the newspaper added.
This is the more profound reason for the hangover of the Greens
in Oldenburg. With every passing moment, they are becoming increasingly
conscious that have fulfilled their obligation to the bourgeoisie
and should leave the stage.
Not a few of the 700 delegates were disappointed that outgoing
Foreign Minister Joschka Fischer, up to now the partys leading
celebrity, refrained from attending the conference, so as to assist
them in their process of grieving.
Everyone who mourns must say his goodbye, one of
the delegates told the Die Zeit newspaper.
In any case, Fischer, as the uncrowned king of the Greens,
had cleared the way for the party to move closer to the Union
parties by resigning his leadership post. The Greens are now attempting
to gain a majority with the CDU, first on a state and then on
a federal level, in order to maintain their very existence and
access to state fleshpots and coffers. Should this be successful,
Fischer might soon surprise his party colleagues with a comeback.
See Also:
An exchange on the German
Greens
[27 September 2005]
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