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Former German president urges no let-up in right-wing agenda
By Stefan Steinberg
6 May 2008
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On April 30, former German President Roman Herzog appeared
at a conference in the press centre of the German parliament alongside
the former Social Democratic Party (SPD) super-minister,
Wolfgang Clement, to publicise the latest book produced by the
Convent for Germany (Konvent für Deutschland).
The Convent for Germany is a right-wing think tank whose membership
includes some of the most prominent members of the German political,
business and banking establishment.
The comments made by Herzog (Christian Democratic UnionCDU)
and others at the press conference in Berlin clearly demonstrated
that the Convent for Germany is intent on stepping up pressure
on the German grand coalition government (SPD-CDU-Christian Social
Union) to proceed more ruthlessly with the attacks on jobs, welfare
and social conditions (Agenda 2010 and Hartz IV) initiated by
the former SPD-Green Party coalition government of which Clement
was a leading member.
Entitled Mut zum Handeln (Courage to Act), the Convents
new book consists of 28 interviews with leading figures from big
business, the banking world and politics. The general tenor of
the interviews is that Germany confronts a logjam of reform and
its current political elite lacks the courage to carry
out the savage and unpopular economic attacks on the living standards
of the vast majority of the population that the Convent for Germany
regards as necessary.
At the same time, the Convent is critical of the countrys
political establishment and, first and foremost, the current coalition
government for being far too hesitant in pushing ahead with far-reaching
changes to Germanys political system.
The fact that Wolfgang Clement shared the platform at the press
conference made perfectly clear the Convent for Germany is content
with the economic reforms introduced by the SPD-Green coalition
led by Gerhard Schröder. The Schröder reforms represent
the most comprehensive attacks on the German social and welfare
state to be carried out since the Second World War.
However, according to Clement at the press conference last
Wednesday, Germanys reform process has been struck numb
(Reformstarre) and the Convents new book is
a form of wake-up call to liberate Germany from excessive
legal hindrances on business activity and a paralysing bureaucracy.
Jürgen Großmann, acting chairman of the energy giant
RWE, was even more blunt at the press conference. According to
Großmann: What we need is nothing less than a revolution!i.e.,
a revolution aimed at establishing the sort of authoritarian
government that is able to ruthlessly combat growing public opposition
to the Agenda 2010 policy.
Herzog gave an insight into the thoroughly elitist thinking
of the Convent in his response to a question from a journalist.
When asked how he expected to win support from the German population
for his proposals, Herzog blurted out in reply: The people
follow [Das volk folgt].... This is clear from the name.
Realising he had gone too far, Herzog quickly sought to correct
his comment and play down his revealing gaffe.
What is the Convent for Germany?
Founded nearly five years ago, the membership list of the Convent
for Germany reads like a whos who of German business and
banking circles peppered with a number of leading right-wing politicians,
including prominent members of the SPD.
The chairman of the Convent is Roman Herzog, federal president
from 1994 to 1999. As a young man, Herzog studied law at the University
of Munich and from 1958 to 1964 was an assistant to the legal
expert Theodor Maunz. Maunzs own legal career began in the
early 1930s when he began advisory work for the National Socialists.
For the entire period up until the end of the Second World War,
Maunz was an enthusiastic supporter of the fascists and as a professor
of law at Freiburg played a leading role in providing a legal
framework for the work of the German police under the Nazis. Maunz
was then allowed to continue his legal career after the war and
went on to authortogether with his assistant Roman Herzogan
authoritative commentary on Germanys postwar constitution.
Herzog made headlines in April 1997, when in his function as
president, he made his so-called Ruck (jolt) speech
at the Hotel Adlon in Berlin. Herzog expressed his frustration
at the pace of political development under CDU Chancellor Helmut
Kohl. Echoing pressure from big business circles, Herzog called
for a jolt in Germany in order to overcome encrusted
structures.
The drastic anti-welfare measures passed a few years later
by the Schröder coalition government represented an initial
response to Herzogs appeal. Herzogs call for radical
change and a jolt has also been echoed more recently by the current
German president, Horst Köhler.
One of the main themes taken up by the Convent for Germany
is the demographic development of Germany. On this issue, Herzog
and other Convent members have repeatedly intervened in the discussion
on the future of Germanys pension system. As chairman of
a commission appointed by the CDU, Herzog already put forward
proposals in 2003 for an increase in the pensionable age from
65 to 67 years, as well as demanding cuts to pensions.
Herzog returned to the same theme just a few weeks ago. In
an interview with the Bild tabloid, Herzog deplored the
influence of senior citizens in political life, declaring: I
fear we are seeing the beginnings of a pensioner democracy: The
numbers of elderly are continually increasing and are receiving
disproportional attention from all political parties. This could
mean in the end that the elderly plunder the young.
Herzogs complaints about the exploitation of the youth
by pensioners is rich stuff coming from a man who receives a monthly
pension of 17,000 from the German Treasury for his five
years as president. This sum is substantially more than an average
German pensioner receives in a year! In fact, Herzogs pension
is just the tip of the iceberg and does not take into account
his earnings from other past political posts, investments, lectures,
books, etc.
Alongside Herzog on the Convent for Germany membership list
are captains of German industry such as Harry Roels, the chairman
of the energy giant RWE; Klaus Zumwinkel, who resigned recently
as chairman of the board at Deutsche Post following a major tax
evasion; Hartmut Mehdorn, executive chairman of Deutsche Bahn/German
Railways, which recently headed a major campaign against train
drivers; and Wendelin Wiedeking, executive chairman of Porsche
autos.
Representing the banking world is Germanys best-paid
banker, Josef Ackermann. Other leading figures from the finance
world are Andreas Dombret, vice chairman of the European operations
of Bank of America, and Thomas R. Fisher, executive chairman of
the WestLB bank (which has recently announced losses running into
the billions in connection with the US-based subprime mortgage
crisis).
Prominent political figures of the so-called Convent for Germany
include the organisations vice chairman Dr. Klaus von Dohnanyi
(SPD, the former mayor of Hamburg), Wolfgang Clement (former minister
of economics and labour from 2002 to 2005), Oswald Metzger (former
member of the Green Party who recently resigned to join the conservative
CDU), Otto Graf Lambsdorff, (former foreign minister, Free Democratic
Party, FDP), Monika Wulf Mathies (SPD, former head of the ÖTV
public service trade union, 1982-1994), and the former head of
the Association of German Industry (BDI), Hans Olaf Henkel.
A glimpse into the thoroughly reactionary political ideas and
priorities of the Convent is provided in another publication,
Das Ende des Weißen Mannes (The End of the White
Man), written by one of its founding members, Professor Dr. Manfred
Pohl. Pohl is a leading theorist of the Convent for Germany who
as a young man began his banking career under Hermann Josef Abs.
Abs was a member of the executive of Deutsche Bank from 1937 to
the end of the war and during this period played a leading role
in the Aryanisation of the German economyi.e.,
the forcible expropriation of the Jews. Like Maunz after the war,
Abs was able to carry on with his activities and headed the Deutsche
Bank well into the 1950s.
One of the main functions currently carried out by his pupil
Pohl is leading the international cultural activities
of the Deutsche Bank
Pohls main thesis in his book is that Europe is being
overrun by immigrants, a situation that will genetically threaten
the dominance of the white man. Under these conditions,
Pohl argues it is necessary for nation states to defend their
interests. In Germany, Europe and the US the identity and
feeling of belonging must remain German, European and American.
Pohls own solution to the demographic problem
in Germany is the demand in Das Ende des Weißen Mannes
that senior citizens between the age of 60 and 80 undertake unpaid
communal work. At the same time, steps must be taken to ensure
that the rate of childbirth is driven up. Pohls comments
in this respect are equally reactionary as his proposals for senior
citizens.
According to Pohl, a man who undertakes housework and cares
for a baby will become feminised and unattractive
to women: This type of man will become feminised, because
his testosterone will not be put to use and decay. With
the result, a la Pohl, that even fewer children are born in Germany.
With regard to education, Pohl writes:
It is necessary at an early stage to filter out the around
5 percent of people who are intellectually in a position to be
able to perform at a high level, through inventions, for example,
and give them specific support at the latest after leaving the
nursery. The approximately 30 percent that apply, install or maintain
inventions or can teach also require their own path of education
as do the remaining 65 percent who operate the machines and carry
out simple intellectual tasks. Around a third of this group is
incapable of being educated, irrespective of how much money is
invested in education.
The nauseating elitism propounded by Manfred Pohl could be
dismissed as the rantings of a politically frustrated person were
it not for the fact that his book features a cover note endorsement
by no less than Roman Herzog. The extent of the political influence
of the Convent for Germany itself is further demonstrated by the
fact that German Chancellor Angela Merkel was the main speaker
at a Symposium of the Convent held in December last year.
Constitutional changes
To achieve their social and political objectives, Herzog, Pohl
and the Convent are clear that major constitutional changes are
needed to develop the authoritarian powers required to completely
overturn the German social welfare system and enforce unpopular
economic policies. Germanys ability to continue reforms,
according to the Convent, is being hampered by too many elections
and too much democracy.
Herzog proposes radical changes to the German political system,
including an extension of the life of a parliament from four years
to five, a reduction in the powers of Germanys states, and
elections for states, communes, etc., that are currently held
separately to be carried out at the same time.
In his recent book, Pohl makes clear that his role model for
a modern state is a well-run company boardroom. In addition to
the constitutional changes demanded by Herzog, Pohl also proposes
reducing the current system of 13 German states to just 8, and
the establishment of a Federal Convent with wide-ranging political
powers.
For membership of such a Federal Convent, Pohl proposes independent,
wise members drawn from the 8 states. By independent
wise, members Pohl would evidently include himself as a
member of this elite of technocrats, business experts and bankers
with no firm political ties, but utterly loyal to the profit motives
of their company or bank. Taken together with the constitutional
proposals made by Herzog and others, Pohls litany of demands
represents a major attack on the German democratic system and
a move towards an increasingly centralised and authoritarian state.
It is necessary to take the proposals made by Herzog and the
Convent for Germany very seriously. Through their ties to big
business and the German lobby system, they have already been able
to exert influence on the process of changing Germanys federal
system, and former SPD chairman Franz Münterfering was quick
to take up Herzogs proposal for retirement at the age of
67.
Herzogs original Ruck speech was directed
at the conservative government led by Helmut Kohl. Kohls
government was then replaced by the Schröder-led coalition
in 1999, which began the process of implementing the type of reforms
demanded by the Convent for Germany and broad sections of German
big business.
Now Herzog and the Convent are worried that the reform
process is running out of steam and are renewing pressure on the
current government to go much further in dismantling the German
social state. Against a background of growing financial crisis
and increasing indications of popular discontent and resistance,
the Convent is demanding antidemocratic reforms to achieve the
sort of authoritarian state capable of enforcing its economic
and political programme.
The reaction of the Convent and its president to the growing
social and political crisis in Germany stands in a long and dishonourable
tradition.
It was the grand coalition government (1928-1931) led by the
social democratic Hermann Müller that carried out the biggest
assault on the German welfare state in the first half of the twentieth
century. In 1930, Müller then advised his party to support
the conservative government led by Heinrich Brüning. Brüning
in turn swept aside the German constitution in his haste to suppress
popular opposition and ruled by presidential decree. In so doing,
he created a precedent that was then exploited to its full in
1933 by the leader of the National Socialists, Adolf Hitler.
There are of course many differences between the current situation
and 1933, but even a cursory examination of the perspectives and
activities of the Convent for Germany makes clear that this layer
of the German ruling elite is quite prepared to tread the same
dangerous path as Müller and Brüning in the 1930s.
See Also:
Hamburg: First-ever state
coalition between Greens and the CDU
[26 April 2008]
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