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International press pours scorn on German voters
By Peter Schwarz
21 September 2005
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The international press has reacted to the German parliamentary
(Bundestag) election held on Sunday with a mixture of horror and
indignation. The message given by voters was clearly understood.
The result expressed a rejection of the policies of welfare cuts
and free market reforms which are currently being
pursued by all European governments.
The anticipated clear-cut victory of the conservative opposition,
consisting of the Christian Democratic Union (CDU), the Christian
Social Union (CSU) and the Free Democratic Party, over the ruling
coalition of the Social Democrats (SPD) and the Greens, failed
to materialize. Instead, neither camp won a majority in the Bundestag,
the German parliament, and both the Social Democrats and the CDU
recorded lower votes than in the previous national election.
It was, above all, a sharp defeat for the CDU and its candidate
for chancellor, Angela Merkel, who had until recently enjoyed
a double-digit lead over the incumbent chancellor, Gerhard Schröder
of the SPD, according to pre-election polls. In the aftermath
of the election, both Merkel and Schröder were insisting
that they would head a new government.
The result of Sundays vote marked the first time in Germanys
post-war history that a national election failed to produce a
clear victor, ushering in a period of parliamentary horse-trading
and political uncertainty.
The overwhelming response of the European and international
press to the election was indicated by the Milan-based Corriere
della Sera, which lamented that in Germany fears of
economic decline and the loss of its welfare state had won.
The Spanish newspaper El País commented: The
Germans tend anyway towards the left. They seem to prefer a moderate
reform in the form of the Agenda 2010 to a radical change of the
social system, as the right-wing intended.
Following the no vote in the European Union referendum
in France, the German election marks the second time voters in
a major European country have delivered a decisive blow to plans
by the ruling elite to reorganize Europe on the basis of strict
free market criteria.
European politics, which was already in crisis following
the no to the European Union constitution in France, threatens
to be more paralyzed than ever, complained the Paris-based
Figaro. The Corriere della Sera came to a similar
conclusion, writing, [I]t will be Germany and all of Europe
which will have to pay the price.
The British Daily Telegraph concluded: Beyond
that, the absence of a black-yellow partnership [a government
of Germanys conservative opposition] will mean, at best,
scant advance on the limited changes introduced in Mr. Schröders
second term. And that, in turn, could slow reform in countries
such as France and Italy. Europe as a whole is a loser from this
profoundly unsatisfactory result.
The Danish Jyllands Posten lamented: The result
of the elections in Germany was just about the last thing which
Europe needs now from its largest and most important nation.
From Stockholm, the Dagens Nyheter complained: The
signal for friends of reform in Europe is bad: Those who dare
to take up responsibility for necessary steps run a large risk
of being punished.
The staunchly conservative Swiss newspaper Neue Zürcher
Zeitung reminded German voters: The fact that the situation
which has now come about excludes any reasonable future option
can only be termed catastrophic. One is tempted to say that this
fact must now penetrate deep into general consciousness. The people
must look into the mirror and ask themselves what they really
want.
Other newspapers joined in heaping abuse on the German electorate.
The most extreme example was the Paris-based Libération,
which, like the German Greens and their house organ taz, has
its roots in the 1968 protest movement, but has in recent years
developed into a reliable prop of the bourgeois order.
Europe will emerge even more unsure of itself... from
this strange election in Germany, Libération
grumbled. Germany now joins the club of countries in which
protesters and radicals can create such damage that any normal
political change is blocked and long-term policy paralyzed.
Almost unanimously, the British press adopted a similar tone,
accusing German voters of being too stupid to understand the necessity
for reforms. The Guardian, which has close links to Tony
Blairs Labour Party, wrote: For all the comparisons
with Margaret Thatcher, Angie [Angela Merkel]... demonstrated
neither the charisma of Britains iron lady nor
the sort of radical policies needed to take Germany out of the
doldrums where it has languished for the last seven years... This
election was marked by deep pessimism, profound disillusion with
the big parties and volatile voters who recognized the need for
change but feared the effects it may bring. Much horse-trading
and haggling lies ahead as these extraordinary results are digested.
Germans may well want reform. But now paralysis looms because
their nerves appear to have failed them.
The conservative Daily Telegraph blustered: The
German electorate yesterday failed to grasp the opportunity for
reform presented by the Christian Democrats (CDU) under Angela
Merkel.
Both the British head of the government, Tony Blair, and the
British conservative opposition had made no secret prior to the
German election of their sympathies for Merkel. Blair even precipitated
a diplomatic tiff during his last trip to Berlin in June, when
he demonstratively visited the leader of the opposition before
meeting with Germanys Social Democratic chancellor, Gerhard
Schröder. Now there is even greater disappointment over Merkels
debacle in the elections.
Nearly all international newspapers warn against a grand coalition
of the SPD and conservative parties which, they claim, would lead
to economic paralysis and stagnation.
The London Financial Times based its comments on economists
who warned that ... such a coalition would make it difficult
for Europes largest economy to adopt the structural reforms
needed to overcome stagnation and record unemployment. The
newspaper then quoted an executive at the auto concern BMW: This
is exactly what the country didnt needa long period
of uncertainty and negotiations. We will all be losers.
The American Wall Street Journal took up the theme:
The muddled result, with neither major party able to form
a stable parliamentary majority, means that Germany will not be
taking decisive action anytime soon to reform its unwieldy welfare
state, which has helped bring it 11 percent unemployment and zero
economic growth. That will not be good for the world...
The New York Times came to the same conclusion: In
a grand coalition any reform of the German economy would be virtually
excluded, as well as any rapprochement with the United States,
as Merkel had indicated.
The vehemence with which the entire international press attacks
the election result must be understood as a warning. The ruling
elite is less and less willing to accept democratic procedures
if they stand in the way of its own business and political interests.
This applies not only to the international press, but also
to the German media, which comes to very similar conclusions.
Under the heading A Debacle, the Frankfurter Allgemeine
Zeitung intoned: There seems to be less chance of convincing
citizens to see the sense of fundamental changes and be prepared
for changes of policy than some have maintained.
Last and not least, at the end of a long article in which all
of the parties were subjected to some biting criticism, the weekly
magazine Der Spiegel claimed that the German election result
presented a great chance: Finally all principles and
election promises could be thrown overboard in favor of unrestrained
expediency.
Wrote Der Spiegel, Because outside of the election
campaigns everybody knows each other in the political arena, what
differentiates the parties today are above all cultural differences
and historical factors... After this election, SPD-Green projects
and intellectual-moral maneuvers can be finally dumped in the
garbage can of history in favor of a blithe pragmatism.
See Also:
German election: a clear rejection of
right-wing policies
[20 September 2005]
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