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: Germany
German Social Democrats, unions fear losing control over the
working class
By Ulrich Rippert
27 October 2007
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The national congress of the Social Democratic Party taking
place this weekend in Hamburg is dominated by the fear that the
party could lose all of its remaining influence within the working
class.
This is the background to the conflict between SPD Chairman
Kurt Beck and Labour Minister Franz Müntefering (SPD), which
has featured prominently in the media during the past few weeks.
Becks proposal to extend by a few months the payment of
Unemployment Pay I (UP1) for older unemployed workers has nothing
to do with any fundamental break with the anti-welfare proposals
(Hartz IV and the Agenda 2010) introduced by the former SPD-Green
Party coalition governmentdespite the campaign by the media
to cast Becks suggestion as a break with the Agenda
2010 (Die Welt) or a return by the SPD to the
social hammock (i.e., policies based on social consensus)
(Handelsblatt).
Becks proposal will change little for the elderly unemployed,
who paid their own contributions towards unemployment insurance
for decades. After a few extra months of UP1 payments, they will
then be forced to eke out a living on the basis of the miserly
Unemployment Pay II benefits. Becks suggestion will also
do nothing to change the situation in which skilled workers, with
many years of professional experience, are forced by the anti-welfare
legislation to accept low-wage jobs. The fact that such workers
merely have a few extra months in which to seek such a job and
use up all their savings does nothing to alter the utterly antisocial
nature of the Hartz IV and Agenda 2010 legislation.
In fact Becks proposal is not new. Conservative politicians,
like the prime minister of the state of North Rhine-Westphalia,
Jürgen Rüttgers (Christian Democratic Party), have been
making the same demand for a long time and the measure was agreed
upon at the last CDU congress.
Münteferings opposition to Becks suggestion
and the resulting polemic have been magnified out of all proportion
by the media and above all serves the purpose of reinventing the
SPD chairman and prime minister of the region of Pfaelz as a politician
with a social conscience. Despite the utterly flimsy basis for
such a claim, it enables Beck to close ranks with the German federation
of trade unions (DGB). His arguments draw directly from the DGBs
catalogue of demands, and numerous union officials immediately
applauded Becks proposal.
Public opposition to the consequences of the Agenda 2010 policies
and Hartz IV laws has been growing in recent months and has led
to increased tensions between the SPD and the DGB. Some DGB functionaries
have even extended feelers towards the recently formed Left Party,
and the SPD leader fears a split in the trade union umbrella organisationa
development he wants to avoid at all costs. The Hamburg congress
this weekend has therefore been planned as a public show of the
new improved relationship between the SPD and the DGB.
An open letter drawn up by 300 work councils and trade union
leaders is also aimed at backing Beck. They call for a return
to the policy of social consensus. Their letter begins
with an overview of social developments in Germany, which, whether
intended or not, represents a devastating critique of the SPD.
The open letter states: Through the development of the
low wage sector, the political promotion of agency work, an extended
range of time limits for job contracts, a law against dismissal
which has been savaged, and other measures aimed at the liberalisation
of industrial legislation have dramatically increased the pressure
on those in work, The trade unionists continue: Privatisation
policies and Hartz IV did the rest. Real wages have not shifted
since the mid-90s. Poverty wages are increasing ... nearly
7 million persons are underemployed, including 5 million in so-called
mini jobs.
Particularly shocking is the rise in child poverty. Over
2.7 million children live in poverty. An additional 2.5 million
are close to poverty ... from birth onwards many children are
denied any real share in social life. Material poverty combined
with a deficit in social protection and education prevent any
possibility of social improvement.
The states promotion of the low wage sector has not only
led to poverty wages, but also to poverty for elderly citizens.
The open letter stresses: A third of all workers confront
poverty in their old age ... with lower wages and contributions
resulting in pensions which are even lower than the miserly Hartz
IV payments.
All this is true. At the same time this devastating social
decline has been accompanied by an unbridled process of enrichment
at the top of society, which has often taken obscene forms. And
this massive redivision of social wealth from below to above is
largely due to policies introduced by the SPD and supported by
the trade unions.
German trade unions applauded when the SPD-Green Party coalition
first took power 10 years ago. When popular opposition grew to
the antisocial policies of the SPD-Green coalition in following
years the unions systematically boycotted the protests and demonstrations.
Then, when electoral support for the SPD slumped, the DGB supported
the calling of new elections and conducted an election campaign
on behalf of the SPD. The SPD then took over leading cabinet posts
(including Labour Minister Müntefering) in the grand coalition
(SPD-CDU-CSU) elected in 2005 and has since formed the right wing
of the coalition on issues of social policy.
In recent years, both the SPD and DGB have seen the loss of
hundreds of thousands of members, and in their open letter the
work councils write that the SPD has lost considerable support
in the factories. Now the bureaucracies are afraid of completely
losing control of the working class.
The decline of the SPD and DGB is the hallmark of a profound
political transformation. The globalisation of production and
the associated fundamental changes in world economy have stripped
away the basis for any sort of policy based on social reforms.
Todays economy is controlled by transnational companies
and international financial houses, which scour the globe for
cheap labour, low taxes and raw materials, playing off one country
against another in order to lower wages and social standards all
over the world.
Under these conditions, the SPD, with the implementation of
the Agenda 2010 policy and the Hartz IV laws, has been transformed
from a party of social consensus into a party of social confrontation.
The work of the SPD has been supplemented by the DGB, which has
accepted a series of measures aimed at undermining the wages and
working conditions of workers in Germany.
Two years ago, the service workers trade union Verdi pushed
through a public service contract that resulted in drastic reductions
in pay and increased workloads for broad layers of civil servants
and secretarial staff. Following protests this spring by German
Telekom workers who opposed the degrading of 50,000 workers, Verdi
limited their strike to symbolic protests, and then agreed to
the terms demanded by Verdi management and forced the workforce
to work an additional four hours per week with no extra pay.
Similar deals have been struck by the industrial trade union
IG Metall and all the other DGB trade unions. Across the country,
union officials and work councils have put their signature to
thoroughly restrictive contracts aimed at wage and welfare cuts.
This latest public display of solidarity between the SPD and
DGB serves in fact to intensify these attacks on the working class.
This is the real significance of all the rhetoric about a newfound
social conscience issuing from the SPD headquarters in Berlin.
The real attitude of the SPD towards the working class is revealed
in the hysterical attacks made on striking train drivers by SPD
leader Beck. Beck accuses the engine drivers of making completely
unrealistic demands and thereby disrupting the principle
of solidarity. He then referred to the train drivers
strike as a disturbance of peaceful company relationsan
accusation that amounts to a call for disciplinary actions against
strikers, including dismissal.
The DGB leaders are especially infuriated by the fact that
the train drivers quit the pact they formerly shared with the
DGB trade unions Transnet and the GDBA, which have both supported
the systematic dismantling of jobs and wage cuts in recent years.
The DGB functionaries fear that the train drivers strike
could lead other sections of workers to revolt against the constant
barrage of wage and welfare cuts.
The train drivers justified their wage demand with the fact
that, since the mid-1990s, half of all the former 370,000 jobs
in the German Railways have been cut, while pay stagnated and
actually fell by 10 percent during the past two years. At the
same time, railways boss Hartmut Mehdorn increased his own salary
last year by 100 percentto a total of 3.18 million.
Taken together, the eight members of the Railways Board pocket
an annual total of 20 million.
Many workers in other companies have undergone similar experiences,
and this explains the broad support for the strike, although a
broad front comprising the government, business federations, the
media and the courts have been trying to criminalize the strikers
for weeks.
The train drivers strike is an expression of the broad
opposition to wage-cutting and social cuts in Germany, but it
can only be conducted successfully on the basis of winning the
support and solidarity of the entire working class in a broad
political offensive against both the SPD and DGB.
The struggle against wage and job cuts, as well as the defence
of social and democratic rights, requires a fundamentally new
political strategy, which places the needs of the working population
above the profit interests of big business. That can be only achieved
if workers break with their old, national organizations and unite
across Europe and worldwide in the struggle for a socialist reorganization
of society.
See Also:
Germany: Social Democratic chairman attacks
train drivers
[22 October 2007]
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