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Germany: SEP collects required signatures to stand in Berlin
elections
By our reporter team
3 July 2006
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In the last five weeks, dozens of members and supporters of
the Socialist Equality Party (Partei für Soziale GleichheitPSG)
have collected nearly 3,000 signatures at employment offices,
shopping centres and universities in Berlin to qualify for candidacy
in the citys senate elections to take place in September.
As stated in the partys election manifesto, which was
distributed in thousands of copies during the past week, the PSG
is participating in the elections to provide a clear voice
and a revolutionary socialist orientation to the widespread opposition
that exists to the policies of the Berlin state government, a
coalition between the Social Democratic Party (SPD) and the Left
Party/Party of Democratic Socialism. The PSG regards its
participation as a step toward the construction of an international
party that opposes war, defends democratic rights, and fights
for social equality and the eradication of poverty.
All parties that are not officially represented in the senate
or German parliament (Bundestag) are required to submit 2,200
signatures of support to the national returning officer in order
to appear on the ballot form. This total constitutes nearly 0.1
percent of the population entitled to vote. Those signing must
give their full name, including maiden name, date of birth and
current address. The district electoral registration offices must
examine the data on each individual form and certify that the
person concerned is entitled to vote, gave correct information
and did not sign for any other party. Only then can the PSG turn
over the confirmed signatures to the national returning officer.
Despite these bureaucratic hurdles, many citizens were prepared
to support the candidacy of the PSG. In particular, the international
and socialist perspectives of the PSG met with active interest.
A number of workers who do not possess German citizenship registered
their disappointment that they could not support the PSG with
their signature. Many first read the election manifesto and then
signed to support the list of the partys candidates. Some
were already familiar with the World Socialist Web Site.
Alexander C. is 37 years old, is unemployed and comes from
the Berlin suburb of Neukölln. He read the election manifesto
of the PSG and then signed immediately, agreeing with many of
the demands made in the programme. The only difference between
the other parties, he said, was their namethey all follow
the dictates of big business. Instead, he said, one must place
human requirements and needs at the centre. Annika P., 23, from
Lichtenberg, explained she was signing because she agreed that
today workers could only defend their rights internationally.
Marek D, who came to Germany from Poland 20 years ago to work
as a bricklayer, also supported the PSG campaign. A political
alternative is absolutely necessary, he said. Every
year things get worse. Marek also complained about the huge
rises in the cost of living, in particular for rent and electricity.
Just 10 years ago, he paid half the sum he now pays for his flat,
but his wages have hardly increased over the same period.
In Berlin, the social crisis is very sharply developed. Unemployment
in the capital officially stands at about 18.1 percent, and an
additional 250,000 inhabitants are dependent on paltry Unemployment
Pay II payments. At 60 billion, Berlin has the highest level
of debt of all European capital cities. Nearly one in five children
live under the official poverty level.
The citys SPD-PDS senate is directly responsible for
this situation. In Berlin, the SPD and Left Party lead the country
in terms of dismantling social and welfare gains. They slashed
15,000 jobs in public service and withdrew from the local employers
association in order to impose a 10 percent wage cut for those
workers left with a job. They have also imposed massive redundancies
and wage cuts in Berlins transport services and hospitals.
Funding for universities and nursery education has also been cut.
The list of welfare cuts implemented by the Berlin senate is lengthy.
Many people react to these bitter experiences with open hostility
to the government parties. While some encountered by the PSG campaigners
were turning away from politics and refused their signature, saying
they saw no sense in a new party, many more signed because the
PSG clearly distinguishes itself from the bureaucrats in the PDS
and the Election Alternative group (WASG) and fights for an independent
movement of the working class.
According to Wiebke S., a young barrister from Treptow, the
Left Party has completely discredited itself. She said, A
party which allows a situation where young children in Berlin
do not even receive a warm meal during the day because their parents
are socially deprived is for me unelectable. Her own salary
is so small that despite having undertaken further studies she
would rank herself among the academic proletariat.
She immediately supported the candidacy of a party that stands
to the left of the Party of Democratic Socialism.
Twenty-eight-year-old Jens L. from Wedding also spontaneously
gave his signature because the PSG calls for the independence
of the workers movement from the old bureaucracies. He no
longer expected much from the Left Party. Upon being asked what
he thought of the WASG, he answered: I cannot take this
group seriously. On the one hand, they sit together with the PDS
in the Bundestag and want to merge with them, and on the other
hand, they seek to put up candidates against the PDS here in Berlin.
They have no differences regarding programme and Left Party leader
Mr. Lafontaine has even already sat in the government.
See Also:
Support the Socialist Equality
Party campaign for the Berlin Senate
[28 June 2006]
Germany: Socialist Equality
Party to run candidates in Berlin state elections
[8 June 2006]
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