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: Germany
Poll shows 82 percent of Germans feel politically disenfranchised
By Dietmar Henning
16 January 2007
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The gulf between official political life and the German population
has reached proportions without precedent in the post-war period.
According to a Forsa opinion poll on behalf of the Stern
magazine, 82 percent of the German population believe they are
politically disenfranchised. An ever-greater percentage doubt
that any change can be achieved through elections.
The poll published at the end of December 2006 declares that
82 percent of the population believe that no consideration
is given to the interests of the people. In east Germany,
this figure reaches 90 percent. Only 18 percent are of the opinion
that the people have something to say.
The data of the survey is even more explicit over the role
of elections. Only 5 percent of those questioned declared that
one could strongly influence political developments
through elections. Just 48 percent believe that the voter could
exert some influence through his or her participation
in an election, while 47 percent are convinced that elections
are incapable of bringing about political change. In east Germany,
this latter figure again increases to 56 percent.
The opinion poll organisation Forsa also questioned citizens
on their adherence to the political system as laid down in Germanys
post-war constitution (the Basic Law), which states, All
government authority proceeds from the people. According
to the inquiry, 36 percent of those questioned were dissatisfied
with the constitutional political system, while 61 percent are
dissatisfied with the actual functioning of the system. In east
Germany, the corresponding figures were 51 and 79 percent.
The gulf between the population and official politics is also
clear from the membership loss in Germanys two main parties,
which were formerly described as peoples parties.
At the end of September 2006, the Christian Democratic Union
(CDU) had 561,070 members. This represents a loss of nearly one
third of its membership since 1991, shortly after the reunification
of Germany, when CDU membership topped 750,000. The Social Democratic
Party (SPD) has suffered an even more drastic loss of members.
In 1998, at the start of the period in government of the SPD-Green
Party coalition led by SPD Chancellor Gerhard Schröder, the
party still had 755,000 members. At the end of last year, this
figure had dropped to 561,000. In both parties, the largest proportion
of membership is filled by men over the age of 60.
A well-known television programme devoted to the discussion
of political issues took up this theme, and on January 7, television
hostess Sabine Christiansen led a discussion on the topic, Does
politics still take citizens seriously?
One of those to speak from the invited members of the audience
was Axel Theissen, former chairman of the SPD local organisation
in Eddelak in the state of Schleswig-Holstein. In November of
last year, he quit the SPD along with 18 other members, and the
local association was disbanded. The chemical plant worker vented
his indignation about the policy of the party of which he had
been a member for many years: The social issue is omitted
and the SPD is implementing social cuts. This was the case
during the SPDs coalition with the Greens, and is now no
different with the SPD in a grand coalition with the CDU/Christian
Social Union (CSU).
In fact, an unprecedented redivision of wealth had taken place
between 1998 and 2005 during the period in office of the SPD-Green
coalition government. Big business and the rich were awarded billions
in tax cuts, while workers and, in particular, the unemployed
were forced to pick up the tab in the form of social and welfare
cuts. When popular opposition grew against such measures, the
SPD prematurely dissolved parliament in order to smooth the way
for the CDU to take power. Since then, election promises made
in 2005 have been swept aside and new measures introducednotably
a 3 percent increase in Value-Added Tax and addition of two extra
years to qualify for retirement benefits. At the same time, additional
cuts have been made to entitlements for the unemployed, and a
fresh range of tax cuts for industry is on the way.
The latest Forsa poll makes clear that voters are disgusted
with extravagant election promises, nice-sounding statements of
basic policy and repeated arguments for social cuts. The widespread
disillusionment with politics and democracy that has
been often deplored by the media and political circles is an expression
of popular alienation and growing opposition towards the established
parties, which are beholden to corporate and financial interests
that are thoroughly hostile to the needs of broad masses of working
people.
The Stern magazine received and published a number of
reader letters and e-mails. Horst Geib wrote: It is urgently
necessary to stem the entire system of lobbyism, which has our
country in the grasp, and Stern adds: Like
Horst Geib many readers criticise the excessive influence on political
decisions by economic circles.
The Forsa inquiry also shows, however, that there is widespread
interest in establishing some sort of influence over political
decision-making. An overwhelming majority (80 percent of those
questioned) supported the introduction of referenda and popular
votes as a means of influencing national policies.
In the television programme of January 7, it was in particular
left to Gregor Gysi, a leader of Germanys recently formed
Left Party-Party of Democratic Socialism, to express official
disquiet over the increasing popular opposition to the political
mainstream. Gysi warned his colleagues in the SPD and the CDU
that they all shared a responsibility to once again make
democracy attractive.
Gysi fears above all that opposition to the established parties
could develop into a movement directed against the capitalist
order itself. He seeks to encourage the illusion that one could
organise the system in a fairer manner through a few cosmetic
changes.
In this respect, he raised as role model the small country
of Switzerland, which has served for decades as a haven for tax
refugees and millionaires. In Switzerland the age-old principle
applies: the millionaires do not need a legal pension, but the
old age pension system needs the millionaires. We lack this principle,
he said.
Nobody should be deceived over Gysis current evocation
of social issues. In its everyday political practice, Gysis
party has continually bowed to the pressure of conditions
and specific obligations in order to carry out policies
at the behest of the banks and big business. At the receiving
end are broad layers of the population such as the citizens of
Berlin, who have painfully experienced the consequences of five
years of coalition between the SPD and the Left Party in the German
capital.
See Also:
Crisis in Germany's Christian Social Union
[13 January 2007]
German interior minister seeks to introduce
martial law measures
[11 January 2007]
Social inequality on the increase in
Germany and Europe
[4 January 2007]
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