|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : Europe
: Germany
Germany: What does the Left Party want to achieve?
By Peter Schwarz
18 June 2007
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email
the author
The founding of a new party is not an everyday occurrence and
should be given careful attention. That also applies to the Left
Party, founded on Saturday June 15 in Berlin through the
union of the Left Party- Party of Democratic Socialism and the
Election Alternativework and social justice (WASG).
Alongside the political and personal intentions of those founding
a party, objective factors also play a role in its emergence.
A new party can apprehend subterranean social changes, articulate
them and so prepare the future. Or it can be a reaction, becoming
a political obstacle for the development of the masses. In the
first instance, the party will be energetic, decisive and bold;
in the second, conservative, marked by half-measures and ambiguities.
The Left Party belongs clearly in the second category.
At its birth, it already bears all the characteristics of old
age.
This can already be seen on first glance. The average age of
the 72,000 members is 65, while that of the 60,000 coming from
the Left Party-PDS is 70. The party leadershipconsisting
of Lothar Bisky (65), Oskar Lafontaine (63), Gregor Gysi (60)
and treasurer Karl Holluba (62)are approaching pension age
and have occupied high state and party offices for many decades
in east and west Germany.
To use the term new to describe this organisation
is a fraud. Organizationally and its heritage ties it seamlessly
to the PDS and its predecessor the SED, the former Stalinist state
party of the German Democratic Republic, whose apparatus and property
it has acquired. In addition, it is joined by a gaggle of former
SPD membersto a large extent full-time union officials under
the leadership of the former SPD chairman, federal finance minister,
state premier of Saarland and mayor of Saarbrucken Oskar Lafontaine.
Internally, the new party is also showing signs of all the
infirmities of old age and of decline. Even before the party was
officially established, a strong right-wing grouping has formed
under the name the Forum for Democratic Socialism.
The forum claims to speak in the name of the officeholders
and elected representatives of the Party of Democratic Socialism,
of several thousand democratic socialists who have
won parliamentary mandates or who occupy political office.
The forum is led by Stefan Liebich, the former regional chairman
of the PDS Berlin regional organisation and a vehement advocate
of the partys participation in the Senate (Berlin city legislature).
The forums founding statement now carries 449 signatures,
including three members of the Berlin Senate, the majority of
the old PDS party executive committee, 10 members of the Bundestag
(federal parliament), state parliamentary party heads from Saxony
Anhalt, Berlin, Saxony and Brandenburg, as well as regional party
chairmen, former ministers, district authority chiefs and mayors.
Stating that it is necessary to establish a productive balance
between protest, the desire to shape society, and democratic socialist
alternatives that point beyond present conditions, it defends
participation in state and local governments in the former East
Germany.
The purpose of this government participation is disputed, particularly
in the WASG. Since the party seeks to present itself in west Germany
as a left-wing alternative to the Social Democratic
Party (SPD) to win office and influence, it is somewhat embarrassing
if in the east, the same party has rooted itself in ministries
and municipal administrations and is cooperating closely with
the SPD and even with the Christian Democratic Union (CDU).
This contradiction is not of a fundamental nature. In east
Germany, the Left Party is already in the place where it still
wants to arrive in the west. Therefore it does not want its desire
to shape society, its government experienceas
the conduct of bourgeois government business is euphemistically
described in the party jargonto be threatened by the blustering
left-wing populism of some WASG bigwigs. Otherwise, as the forums
statement puts it, the Left Party will fall behind the requirements
of real life.
Two years of internal factional fights, plots and manoeuvres
have preceded the founding of the party, several times threatening
to bring the entire project to the brink of failure. The fact
it has finally come into being is a result of profound social
changes. The rightward turn of the SPD, the vote to participate
in war and the substantial welfare cuts under the Schröder
government and above all the Hartz laws it passed reforming
welfare and unemployment benefits have resulted in declining SPD
membership and the alienation of the party from masses of voters,
allowing a political vacuum to develop that the Left Party is
seeking to fill.
Often, the organisation has been surprised by its own election
successes, as was recently the case in the city-state of Bremen,
where with 8.4 percent of the vote it entered a state parliament
in west Germany for the first time. And this despite (or rather
because) the partys lead candidate in Bremen had been rejected
by the national party leadership and received no support from
Berlin.
One opinion poll found that 47 percent of voters in east Germany
welcome the establishment of the Left Party; with a 27 percent
rating the party would sit between the SPD (29 percent) and the
CDU (25 percent) if elections to the Bundestag were held today.
The unarticulated hopes that are linked with the establishment
of the Left Party are, however, built on sand. The party has firmly
decided to put a stop to the left-wing development from which
it has profited in elections, and to return to the fold of the
SPD. Its perspective is not to shape a new future but to revive
the past.
It tirelessly encourages the illusion that the social reformist
policies of the 1970s can be reanimated in the age of globalization.
It does so completely ignoring the fact that these policies have
failed worldwide and that all social reformist parties without
exceptionincluding its own regional organizations that
have taken over government responsibilityhave moved far
to the right.
Everything the party leaders say speaks of their desire to
cooperate with the SPD as soon as it makes some left-wing gesture.
Thus WASG founder Klaus Ernst announced in the Berlin Tagesspiegel
newspaper, We are pushing the SPD to the left.
The Left party will take up certain social democratic
positions, which todays SPD has abandoned to the frustration
of its voters and members, Klaus continued. And there
will be points when the SPD moves again to the left. Thus there
are also possibilities for a common policy, for coalitions, no
question about it. The pre-condition is, however, that the social
democracy carries out an internal process of purification.
There is about as much chance that the SPD will move to
the left again as there is a chance that the sun will set
in the west and rise in the east. Like the rightward turn of the
British Labour Party under Tony Blair, the French Socialist Party
under Segolene Royal or the Italian Left Democrats under Massimo
DAlema, the rightward development of the SPD under Gerhard
Schröder is not the result of the betrayal of
individuals but the impossibility of reconciling class contradictions
in the age of global financial markets and production. It is not
only the SPD as an organization that has suffered a shipwreck,
but the programme of social reformism that the Left Party is now
seeking desperately to reanimate.
The words of Ernst, a highly paid IG-Metall union functionary,
speak of the fear of the union bureaucracy that the widening gulf
between the SPD and the working class can have revolutionary consequences.
It is no coincidence that the WASG developed as a reaction to
the Hartz welfare reforms, when many voters and members
turned away from the SPD and the Monday demonstrations (which
had preceded the collapse of the Berlin Wall in 1989) spontaneously
began again.
No one understands this better than Oskar Lafontaine, the future
chairman of the Left Party, who for 40 years held offices in the
SPD. Lafontaine knows how to provoke and bluster in order to increase
the credibility of his party. But behind this stands a right-wing,
social democratic programme. He wants to enter government at the
side of the SPD. At a press conference last weekend, he named
his conditions: the cancelling of the Hartz laws, the introduction
of a minimum wage, the withdrawal of the German Armed Forces from
Afghanistan and the reestablishment of the link between pensions
and wagesthen the Left Party would immediately form
a government Lafontaine said.
The Left Party wants to prevent workers and young people drawing
revolutionary conclusions from the crisis of capitalist society
and from turning to a socialist perspective. Therefore it encourages
illusions that capitalism can be reformed. Such a policy is dangerous.
The frustration that results inevitably from such disappointed
illusions and broken election promises forms fertile soil for
right-wing extremist forces. In Mecklenburg Pomerania and in Saxony
Anhalt, government participation by the PDS has been followed
by a substantial increase in the vote for the right-wing German
Peoples Union (DVU) and German National Party (NPD).
The Left Party maintains a foundation that bears the name of
Rosa Luxemburg. Just as the Stalinists once embalmed Lenins
body and placed it on public display in order to supplant his
revolutionary spirit, the Left Party upholds the memory of the
great Marxist Rosa Luxemburg in order to bury her sharp, revolutionary
character.
It is worthwhile to revisit what Luxemburg wrote some 90 years
ago concerning the establishment of the Independent Social Democratic
Party (USPD), the ideological ancestors of todays Left Party.
The Independent Social Democratic Party is innately a child
of weakness, and compromise is in its very nature, she wrote.
It toddles behind events and developments, never walking
... Each dazzling ambiguity, which led to the confusion of the
masses ... found its eager support ... A party constituted in
this way, suddenly posed before the historical decisions of the
revolution, had to fail deplorably ... its politics, its tactics,
its principles scattering like sand.
These words could have been written about the founding of the
Left Party. This squad of old men is not shining a light into
the future, but represent a backward-looking reaction, a political
obstacle that the working class should pass over as swiftly as
possible.
See Also:
Four days after the G8 summit: German
police raid eleven premises on suspicion of terrorism
14 June 2007]
German Greens on the road to coalitions
with the conservative CDU
[13 June 2007]
German high court upholds police ban
on G8 summit protest
[8 June 2007]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |