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Germany: Election Alternative leaders purge regional executives
and withdraw candidates
By Ulrich Rippert
24 May 2006
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On the weekend of May 13-14, the national executive of the
Election AlternativeLabor and Social Justice (WASG) dismissed
the regional leaderships of its organization in the states of
Berlin and Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania and replaced them with
so-called commissarial national co-coordinators. The
first measure taken by the new commissioners was to withdraw the
applications made by the state branches of WASG to participate
in regional elections this autumn.
Commissar Hüseyin Aydin also called off a special party
congress planned by the Berlin WASG group. When the Berlin congress
was held May 16 in defiance of Aydin, he promptly declared all
resolutions and decisions made by the delegates were to be invalid.
The planned state election campaigns, in which local WASG candidates
would oppose Left Party-PDS (Party of Democratic Socialism) candidates,
cut across the plans of WASG to merge with the Left Party-PDS.
The regional WASG organizations had voted to run their own candidates
because in both Berlin and Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania the incumbent
governments include the Left Party-PDS, which has fully participated
in attacking the jobs, wages and conditions of the working class.
Germany has not witnessed such dictatorial behavior by a party
leadership since the collapse of the Stalinist dictatorship headed
by the Socialist Unity Party (SED) in East Germany. Even conservative
bourgeois parties have, in public, shown more respect for democratic
standards than WASG.
The question arises: how will a party that treats its own members
with contempt and abuses their democratic rights deal with workers
and broad layers of the population, should it come to power? The
dictatorial methods employed internally by the WASG executive
committee make it clear that the party would not be adverse to
using such means to suppress opposition from below.
The undemocratic measures adopted by the executive committee
are bound up with WASGs political orientation and cannot
be understood apart from it. The decision to crack down and prevent
at all costs an electoral candidacy by WASG regional organizations
in Berlin and Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania shows that WASG lines
up behind the anti-social policies which have been implemented
by the Left Party-PDS in alliance with the Social Democratic Party
(SPD) over a period of four years in Berlin and for eight years
in Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania.
A brief review of the political balance sheet of the Left Party-SPD
governments in Berlin and Schwerin makes clear why the WASG executive
committee is not prepared to tolerate any debate or critical examination
of its policies. In both states, the Left Party is responsible
for implementing the anti-social measures which it condemns in
its program.
In many of its programmatic documents, WASG declares its opposition
to privatizations in the public service. But in Mecklenburg-Western
Pomerania, Labor and Social Minister Helmut Holter (Left Party-PDS)
has played a leading role in privatizing such services, with catastrophic
results in the form of rock bottom wages and the nations
highest rate of unemployment (officially 22.1 percent).
In Berlin, the first official act by the incoming SPD-PDS Senate
was to enact a 21.6 billion euro guarantee for the bankrupt Berlin
Banking Company (BGB), subsidizing private fund owners and shareholders
by transferring the debt onto the backs of the population.
At the same time, a drastic cost-cutting program was adopted
which involved the loss of 15,000 jobs in public service, longer
working hours and decreased wages. Employees of the citys
public transport corporation had their wages and salaries cut
by ten percent (15 percent for new-hires). According to its own
data, the Senate saved a total of 38 million euro annually from
its cuts in the public service.
In order to guarantee yields for private investors in Berlins
water supply industry, water fees were raised by an average of
25 percent. Additional measures taken by the Senate include: introducing
parental responsibility for providing teaching materials in Berlin
schools, a substantial increase in pre-school fees, increased
working hours for teachers, 75 million euros in cuts to the citys
universities.
While WASG and the Left Party-PDS have organized a nationwide
campaign to demand a legal minimum wage of 10 euro, the Berlin
Senate recently decided to switch its postal service to the private
company PIN AG, which pays its workers around 5 euro per hour.
When WASG commissar Aydin told the recent special party congress
that the Left Party-PDS was absolutely opposed to privatization
and welfare cuts and committed to a return to collective bargaining
agreements, he was met with gales of laughter and catcalls.
With the collaboration of the Left Party-PDS, Berlin was the first
German state to quit the state labor rate community (TdL) as a
necessary step for implementing drastic wage and welfare cuts
for public service workers.
The selection of Aydin as commissar by the WASG executive to
replace the dissident regional committees was no accident. He
embodies the type of trade union bureaucrat who is frequently
to be found in the ranks of WASG.
Over 25 years ago, at the age of 18, Aydin began work at the
Thyssen steel factory in Duisburg. He soon joined the Social Democratic
Party and four years later was a full-time trade union rep in
his factory. At the beginning of the 1990s he played a key role
in dismantling jobs in the steel industry in his function as works
council representative and leading member of the IG Metall trade
union.
In 1996 he became a full-time union secretary for IG Metall
in North Rhine Westphalia. Last year he switched from the SPD
to WASG, which he now represents in the German parliament (Bundestag).
Aydin has had ample opportunity to prove his expertise when
it comes to bureaucratic maneuvers and intrigues. Just last year,
for example, he worked with the party executive committee to dissolve
the original regional organization of WASG in North Rhine Westphalia
after a group of Opel auto workers tried to argue their point
of view inside WASG.
The dismissed Berlin regional party council has announced that
it will not accept the action of Aydin and the decision of the
national leadership, and will proceed against them with
all means. At the special party congress, the delegates
expressed their support for the regional leadership by a large
majority and decided to go ahead with their plans to put up candidates
in the autumn elections.
Nevertheless, the action taken by the WASG national executive
undermines the political basis for the activities of the Berlin
WASG. After all, the central argument employed by the Berlin WASG
and the group Socialist Alternative SAV, which has some influence
inside the regional organization, is that the building of WASG
is the answer to the anti-social policies of the Berlin Senate.
On a national level, they continue to support plans for the unification
of the Left Party-PDS and WASG.
Now the WASG national executive has made it patently clear
how absurd this position is. The planned unification of the Left
Party-PDS and WASG is based on the premise of rejecting and suppressing
any challenge to the general right-wing thrust of bourgeois politics
in Germany.
This development contains important political lessons for the
working class. The fact that the Left Party-PDS and WASG have
exposed themselves as bureaucratic apparatuses even prior to their
unification is an expression of the advanced crisis of the capitalist
system. On a daily basis, the clichés about the possibility
of a socially progressive means of organizing the
free market economy are disproved by the dominance
of an international financial oligarchy over social life, and
supposed left parties are being rapidly transformed
into the last line of defense of the bourgeois order.
In Italy, Refounded Communism (Rifondazione Comunista) has
taken up posts in the government of Romano Prodi in order to impose
those social and welfare cuts which the Berlusconi government
failed to carry out. In France, radical groups such as the Revolutionary
Communist League (Ligue Communiste Révolutionaire) are
offering their services as props of a future bourgeois left
government. The most important conclusion to be drawn is
that there is no alternative for the working class other than
the building of a new party that fights on the basis of a socialist
and internationalist perspective.
See Also:
Germany: Election Alternative, the Socialist
Alternative Group and Trotskyism
[6 May 2006]
Germany: Election Alternative
defends policies of Berlin state government
[5 May 2006]
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