|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : Europe
: Germany
Fishing for coalition partners, German Greens intervene in
Hesse elections
By Hendrik Paul
25 January 2008
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email
the author
On Monday, January 21, the former German foreign minister and
leading member of the Green Party, Joschka Fischer, addressed
a meeting in Wiesbaden during the final week of campaigning in
the Hesse state elections. After nearly one and a half years of
abstaining from party politics, Fischers appearance in Wiesbaden
was aimed at assisting the campaign of the Greens to re-enter
the state government.
Hesse is regarded as the birthplace of the German Greens and
was the first state to witness participation by a Green Party
faction. So far, however, the partys election campaign in
the state has been a routine affair, which has attracted little
public notice. The party evidently assumed that the re-election
of the right-wing state prime minister, Roland Koch (Christian
Democratic Union), was inevitable and there was little sense in
mobilising Green supporters for a real campaign.
The Green Party leadership was in particular surprised at the
extent of public opposition to the racist anti-immigrant campaign
organised by Koch. The Green leadership is broadly contemptuous
of the working population and had assumed there would be broad
support for the Koch campaign. In fact, Kochs initiative
has backfired and his popularity has slumped according to recent
opinion polls, which now suggest a close race between the CDU
and the Social Democratic Party (SPD).
The Greens have been unable to profit, however, from the rapid
decline in support for the CDU. Support for the party is polling
at 7 percent with the likelihood that its share will drop even
further before Sundays election. This represents the poorest
showing for the party in the state for the past 25 years, and
it is noticeable that media interest in the Greens is also on
the wane. Only one local reporter turned up for the election campaign
appearance of the former Green Party environment secretary Jürgen
Trittin last week.
The meeting with Fischer was therefore planned on the basis
of recapturing some media interest. Party activists loudly proclaimed
the entry of the former Green leader into the splendid concert
hall in Wiesbaden, surrounded by a host of photographers. The
hall was ablaze with camera lights as Fisher took his place on
stage and the partys local candidate in the election, Tarek
Al-Wazir, was forced to call the journalists and photographers
to order. Over 100 journalists had come from all over Europe to
chart the re-entry of the former Green chieftain to the political
stage.
The rest of the meeting, however, was all downhill. Fischer
resorted to his customary bluster in his speech, which was peppered
with generalities. He had nothing worthwhile to say about any
of the pressing social problems in Germany today, and leading
newspapers registered their disappointment with his speech the
next day. According to the Frankfurter Rundschau, The
lion roared, but no longer has anything to say. In its online
edition, Die Zeit also noted that Fischer had nothing
new to say.
Barely any of the commentators, however, dealt with the question
of why Fischers clichés sounded so tired and hollow.
The principal reason is the partys attempt to fish for support
and alliances from all sidesincluding cooperation with the
CDU. The Greens already work together with the CDU in Hesse at
the local level. Both parties share power in a coalition in the
states biggest citythe finance metropolis of Frankfurt.
According to the citys CDU mayor, Petra Roth, collaboration
with the Greens in the city constitutes a coalition of realism.
While the Greens are intent on drawing closer to the CDU, they
confront the dilemma in Hesse that support for the conservatives
has slumped and there is every possibility that on Sunday an alternative
could emerge in the form of an SPD-Green governmentwith
the tacit support of the Left Party.
Against this background the speeches by Fischer and leading
Green candidate Al-Wazir concentrated on the simplistic but widespread
demand: Koch has to go! Koch was criticised by both speakers for
his environmental and education policies as well as his racist
campaign, but neither of the two Greens spelt out the real nature
of Kochs offensive against immigrant youth, i.e., an effort
to divert social anger and promote law-and-order policies in order
to build up the power of the state. After all, the Greens have
already played their own role in encouraging such policies. For
seven years the party supported at a federal level the law-and-order
policies introduced by Interior Minister Otto Schily, who drastically
curtailed rights for immigrants and undermined a number of basic
democratic rights.
According to Fischer the only alternative to the CDU government
in Hesse was a coalition of the SPD and Greens. He made no attempt,
however, to explain how anything would be different in the state
with an SPD-Green government. Voters can recall the Green election
slogan in 1998, when the party called for the replacement of the
CDU chancellor, Helmut KohlKohl has to go! On
this basis a so-called red-green alternative took
powerthe SPD and the Greens led by Chancellor Gerhard Schröder
and Vice Chancellor and Foreign Minister Joschka Fischer.
For many millions of Germans the results of the policies introduced
by the SPD-Green government were traumatic. The coalition government
introduced the Agenda 2010 program and the Hartz IV laws, which
represented the most comprehensive attack on the welfare protections
since the Second World War. The same government was the first
in postwar history to send German troops to fight abroad. It also
abolished the postwar right to asylum. Bowing to the demands of
big business, the Greens even abandoned their demand for the immediate
cessation of the use of nuclear power, agreeing to delay any such
move for many years.
Fischer made clear that his campaign against Roland Koch should
not be regarded as hostility to the CDU. Both speakers went to
some lengths to draw a distinction between Koch and the rest of
the CDU. Fischer declared he had been very hopeful
of reaching agreement with the CDU over the issue of immigration
until Roland Koch decided it was necessary to reach for
the big stick. Koch, according to Fischer, had done
a disservice to a modern CDU.
The Greens in Hesse are keen to regain power, but this is unlikely
with Koch as leader of the CDU in the state. However, the party
remains open to the prospect of sharing power with the conservatives
in other states and regions. One month after the Hesse vote another
election takes place in Hamburg where the Greens have made no
secret of their readiness to work with the CDU. It would have
fatal consequences for the Greens in Hamburg if their colleagues
in Hesse were now to be overly aggressive in their campaign against
the CDU.
Even the CDU acknowledges that it has no principled differences
with the Greens. When Fischer withdrew from political office following
the election defeat of the SPD-Green federal government in September
2005 this was regarded by the CDU as a signal that the Greens
were ready to work with themup to the federal level. Leading
CDU politicians such as Interior Minister Wolfgang Schäuble
or Chancellor Angela Merkel toyed with the prospect of a coalition
with the Greens and the free-market FDP (Free Democratic Party)
before deciding instead to form a coalition with the SPD.
In this respect it is necessary to examine a number of the
few concrete suggestions made by Fischer in his speech. In response
to Kochs campaign against immigrant youth, for example,
Fischer responded by making the right-wing demand for more police
and to provide them with better training and equipment. While
Fischer also called for more social workers to ease social tensions
the reality is that such professionals are the first to lose their
jobs when the state administration decides to implement more savings
and cuts.
Fischer also approached the issues of education and environmental
policy entirely from the standpoint of economic and business priorities.
His opposition to nuclear energy was based on the extensive costs
involved, which included the expense of finding investors. In
the meantime the search for alternative energies has developed
into its own lucrative business, which is also heavily dependent
on public (i.e., taxpayers) subsidies. Fischer repeated
the deeply anti-working class view of the Greens, saying he saw
no problem with high energy prices because this would supposedly
encourage a shift towards alternative fuels.
At the same it was notable that a number of vital issues were
ignored in Wiesbaden. While he was treated like a pop star Fischer
said nothing about the crash in world stock markets, which led
the German DAX index to lose over 60 billion in a single
day. Any mention of the crisis of the world capitalist system
would serve to further undermine the reformist outlook of pressuring
the powers-that-be, which is contained in the Green Party election
manifesto.
The second major issue Fischer chose to ignore was the rapid
growth of poverty in Germany. He refused to address the astounding
growth of social inequality, which has been produced by the policies
he supported as a leading minister in the former federal government.
No mention was made of the crisis facing those unemployed forced
to survive on the miserly Hartz IV payments. Nothing was said
about the 2 million workers in Germany who are forced to work
for less than 5 per hour, while company profits and executive
salaries go through the roof. The manner in which Fischer ignored
the plight of a large proportion of the population speaks volumes
about the type of alternative on offer from the Greens.
While the Greens pay special attention to ensure that their
attacks on the CDU do not have detrimental consequences for the
party beyond the borders of Hesse, they have nothing to say concerning
crucial national and international political and social developments.
In fact, it is precisely such global eventsthe developing
recession in the United States, the increase in oil prices, the
panic on the international stock markets and the explosion of
militarism in the name of the war on terrorwhich
have the most powerful and direct effect on the electorate of
Hesse, rather than the small change of Hesse state politics and
tactical manoeuvring which features so prominently in the election
propaganda of the Greens.
See Also:
PSG candidate demands immediate withdrawal
of German army from Afghanistan
[24 January 2008]
Germany: Partei für Soziale Gleichheit
(Socialist Equality Party) manifesto for Hesse state elections
[2 January 2008]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |