|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : Europe
: Germany
The Hesse state election:
The Left Party offers its services to the SPD
By Markus Salzmann
14 December 2007
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email
the author
The German Social Democratic Party (SPD) has a problem in its
current election campaign in the state of Hesse. Although there
is widespread opposition to the anti-social policies of the ruling
Christian Democratic (CDU) state government, led by Prime Minister
Roland Koch, and the desire for a change of government is great,
the SPD is not regarded as a genuine alternative.
This is due to the fact that the party shares power at a federal
level in a grand coalition with the CDU, and SPD ministers
in the cabinet are among the most hard line proponents of welfare
cuts. On the other hand, it is well known in Hesse that Koch would
have been unable to implement his reactionary policies if the
SPD had put up any sort of serious opposition. On a whole number
of issues there has also been a tacit coalition between the SPD
and CDU on the state level in Hesse.
Under these conditions, the Left Party is being sized up by
the ruling elite for an expanded role in the political landscape.
While a right wing faction within the SPD rejects any co-operation
with the Left Party, in light of a strong left tendency
(according to the Frankfurt Rundschau) in the state, the
SPD is attempting to test the waters with regard to possible collaboration
with the Left Party.
This was in part what motivated the invitation given to leading
candidates of the Left Party to put forward their standpoint at
a meeting of the Frankfurt Press Club (FPC) on Tuesday. The FPC
is a well-known association for journalists and others active
in the media in the Rhine-Main area. It functions as a meeting
point for politicians and the media and regularly organizes meetings
and discussion on different political and cultural topics.
The meeting on Tuesday evening was chaired by Gerhard Kneier,
the vice-president of the FPC and the organisations coordinator
with the Associated Press. The main guests were Willi van Ooyen,
the leading candidate of the Left Party in the state elections,
and Ulrich Wilken, the partys regional chairman. Van Ooyen
stressed at the start that he was not a member of the Left Party,
even if he headed its state list.
A trained electrician who now works as a teacher, Van Ooyen
has been active in the trade union movement since his apprenticeship.
He first joined the rail workers trade union GdED (German Rail
Union), and is currently a member of the public service union,
Verdi. At the same time he has been active since the 1960s in
the German peace movement, social forums and various NGOs. He
came to prominence as organiser of numerous Easter peace marches.
He declared that his reason for standing for the Left Party
was that the party should play the role of a partner
for all sorts of left and extra-parliamentary organizations. The
aim of entering the state parliament is to exert pressure on the
other parties and appeal to their healthy sense of social
justice.
When asked by the moderator why the Left Party had chosen a
non-member to be its leading candidate, regional chairmen Wilken
answered. He evidently had problems playing down the conflicts
in the party over the issue of selecting a candidate. The undemocratic
procedure of the party leadership has been a repeated source of
dispute amongst party members.
Even prior to the founding conference of the Left Party in
Hesse the federal party leadership had made their own choice for
leading candidate in the Hesse state electionthe former
chairman of the German Federation of Trade Unions (DGB) in the
state, and long time former SPD member, Dieter Hooge.
With the approval of party leaders, Oskar Lafontaine and Gregor
Gysi, Hooge was feted by the media as its leading candidate in
the run-up to the party congress, but congress delegates refused
to fall into line and voted down Hooge on two occasions. In his
place they elected the long time functionary of the German Communist
Party (DKP), Pit Metz from Marburg.
This did not fit into the schema worked out by Lafontaine and
the party leadership in Berlin. Lafontaine had broader political
ambitions, which he did not want to discuss openly with Hooge.
Like the Greens, Lafontaine looked upon Hesse as a test case for
later participation in the government on a federal level. For
the party rank and file, however, the selection of a candidate
such as Hooge casts doubts on the very credibility of the partys
pose as a force for opposition.
Eventually the party executive committee forced Metz to voluntarily
withdraw his candidacy. In his place the party selected van Ooyen,
whose job was to smooth over the conflicts within the party. At
the press club, Wilken called him a master of integration.
Preparations for a government post alongside
the SPD
The discussion at the press club mainly revolved around the
question of whether the Left Party is ready to take up government
responsibility alongside the SPD. At the start of the meeting,
Kneier pointed out that according to the latest opinion polls
the Left Party could anticipate up to 6 percent of the voteenough
to secure the partys entry into the Hesse state parliament.
This would in turn mean that a majority for a coalition of the
SPD, the Greens and Left Party would be possible.
Van Ooyen and Wilken tried to avoid giving a clear answer to
the question about government participation. They referred to
the fact that the voters had not yet cast their ballots and it
was still unclear whether the party would receive enough votes
to warrant major changes in its political direction. At the same
time, the SPD was still the bigger of the two parties and was
obliged to make the first approach.
Both representatives of the Left were so defensive that the
moderator finally asked whether they were not being too modest
in view of the strong opposition to Prime Minister Roland Koch
(CDU).
He referred to an article in the Frankfurt Allegmeine Zeitung
from the same day with the heading Discontent is growing.
The FAZ article cited statistics that make clear that opposition
to increasing social inequality is growing. When asked what they
considered to be the primary tasks of the state, 74 percent responded
with the demand for measures to end child poverty, 72 percent
for reduced taxes for low wage earners, 69 percent for a minimum
guaranteed income, and 67 percent for the abolition of all tax
loopholes. The article states it is alarming that only 15
percent of those asked thought the economic situation in the country
was just.
Although both representatives of the Left Party sought to avoid
giving any concrete statements about possible co-operation with
the Social Democrats it became clear in the course of the meeting
that they were in fact keen to move towards a coalition with the
SPD. Only internal party tensions prevented them from admitting
this at the current time.
Wilken explained, If it came down to an offer of discussion
with SPD leading candidate, Andrea Ypsilanti, the Left Party
would naturally accept. Efforts to unseat Koch would
not be derailed by the Left Party. Van Ooyen stressed the fact
that he knew Ypsilanti very well and maintains an open relationship
with the SPD.
How credible is your party?
An editorial board member of the World Socialist Web Site,
Ulrich Rippert, then intervened in the discussion and asked
why a possible coalition of the SPD, Left Party and the Greens
should be looked upon as any sort of alternative to the policies
of Koch. In the past, the SPD in a coalition with the Greens at
a federal level had carried out relentless attacks on social gains
and the Left Party does the same in those regions where it exercises
any political power.
Rippert dealt with the role of the Left Party in Berlin, where
it has ruled in a coalition with the SPD for the past six years.
He said: In your Hesse election program you demand very
many measures to tackle wage and welfare cuts. Why does your party
do exactly the opposite of this when it is in government and shares
political influence? Are you really of the opinion that a program
of social reforms such as those introduced in the 1970s by former
SPD leader Willy Brandt can be implemented in a situation where
the globalization of production has transformed conditions today?
Addressing the representatives of the Left Party he asked: How
credible is your party?
While the Hesse election program of the Left Party criticizes
the introduction of one-Euro jobs and points out that they have
led to massive cuts in the number of regular jobs, the Left Party
in Berlin has repeatedly resorted to this discriminating
form of the work in order to replace those employed in the
public services. Over 34,000 people are employed in Berlin with
such jobs in so-called work opportunities with additional
expenditure remuneration.
Especially cynical is the demand by the Hesse Left Party for
a shortening of working times and adherence to current contractual
standards. In 2003, the Berlin senate withdrew from the local
employers association. This immediately made the contract
agreement for workers employed by the state invalid. The senate
extended working times for official employees from 40 to 42 hours
per week and dictated wage cuts of 12 percent for state employed
workers together with cuts in vacation entitlement and Christmas
benefitstopped off by an extension of the working week from
38.5 to 42 hours.
While the Hesse Left Party calls for education free of charge,
the Left Party in Berlin has introduced fees in schools for teaching
material and slashing cuts to teaching staff. The list of social
attacks by the Berlin senate could be extended at length. It reduced
housing benefits for sections of the unemployed and drastically
increased fees for nursery schooling. At the same time, it did
all it could to satiate the demands of financial institutions
in the German capital - most notably the bailing out of the bankrupt
Berlin Banking Company at the expense of the tax payer and the
ordinary citizens of Berlin, who were forced to foot the bill.
In the state of Mecklenburg Vorpommern, which was governed
by a similar SPD-Left Party coalition until last year, the situation
does not look much different. It carried out privatisation policies
that outstrip anything undertaken by Roland Koch in Hesse. No
other German state has denationalised so many hospitals in the
past four years as Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania. Increased poverty
in the state is reflected in the number of people on social welfare,
which increased under the SPD-Left coalition by 6,000 to total
57,000.
Wilken could only reply to the issues raised with a mixture
of evasions and outright lies. He explained that he had opposed
the quitting of the employers association by the Berlin
senate, and then declared that the subsequent contract had brought
some improvements for employees. In fact the contract
stipulated12 percent wage cuts together with longer working times!
It was clear from the discussion at the Frankfurt Press Club
that the Left Party in Hesse is carrying out a cynical manoeuvre.
While campaigning for votes with left sounding slogans, it is
offering its services to the SPD as coalition partner in order
to stabilize the existing bourgeois order.
See Also:
Germany: a positive response to the PSG
election campaign in Hesse
[13 December 2007]
PSG election meeting in Frankfurt
For a socialist answer to the social disaster
[12 December 2007]
German Socialist Equality Party certified
to participate in Hesse state elections
[5 December 2007]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |