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Weekly Worker 618 Thursday March 30 2006
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Ben Lewis (a member of the CPGB and the German left party, WASG) reports
on last weeks regional elections in three German federal states
and the local elections in the state of Hesse, which give a useful snapshot
of the soon-to-be-united left
About one-fifth of the German electorate got the chance to vote in the
March 26 state and local elections, which - despite a record low turnout
- provided an interesting insight into the balance of forces within Germany,
with the evident inability of the ‘grand coalition’, uniting the conservative
CDU and the social democratic SPD, to deal with social problems facing
the people. Far more interestingly, it also threw light on how the Linkspartei/WASG
is faring since its remarkable effort in last September’s general elections,
when it achieved 8.7% of the vote.
The elections were characterised by one worrying trend - apathy. Despite
both main parties seeing the results as confirmation of the success of
their coalition, with the CDU winning two and the SPD one of the state
elections, the very fact that in the east German state of Saxony-Anhalt
only 44.4% of people turned out to vote highlights the extent of the alienation
from the political system. This trend was also clearly present in the
west, with only 45.6% of people in Hesse voting in the local elections.
This is not surprising, as the cosy coalition set up by the two parties
has served only to show how little difference there is between ‘red’ and
‘black’.
In Saxony-Anhalt, however, the Linkspartei.PDS achieved its best ever
result, winning 24.2% of the vote. Its candidate, Wulf Gallert, ran a
campaign that concentrated on the “social issues” arising from the latest
attacks on jobs, conditions and welfare that workers have been subjected
to by the grand coalition. The ex-‘official’ communist Linkspartei.PDS
was able to mobilise a good number of activists and supporters in this
former eastern state and pushed the SPD into third place. The potential
for a left Volkspartei is clearly there.
On the other hand, the political trajectory of the Linkspartei.PDS is
of great concern to many on the left. Despite its extra-parliamentary
mobilisation against social cuts, the party is clearly set on establishing
further red-red coalitions similar to the ones in Berlin and Mecklenburg
Vorpommern. By forming a government coalition with the social democrats
they are under the illusion that they somehow ‘keep them under control’.
In reality of course, it is the Linkspartei.PDS that is being kept in
check. The experiences within these coalitions have proved this over and
over again - the comrades frequently end up voting through the very policies
that they claim to be mobilising against (a recent example being the selling
off the entire public housing stock in the eastern city of Dresden).
In this sense the Linkspartei.PDS is more concerned with issues of Realpolitik
than trying to empower workers in the struggle for socialism. In Saxony-Anhalt,
although the CDU won the biggest share of the votes, the Linkspartei.PDS
was quick to calculate that it could form a government coalition with
the SPD. Wulf Gallert even volunteered the information that he would be
quite prepared to become state president. A regional ‘grand coalition’,
however, is a far more likely outcome.
Nevertheless, this desire of the Linkspartei.PDS to consolidate and expand
its foothold in government is increasingly becoming the sore point in
the process aimed at a merger of the Linkspartei.PDS with the Wahlinitiative
für Arbeit und Soziale Gerechtigkeit (WASG).
WASG: modest
In the west of Germany, the WASG made some modest gains in the local
elections, but, compared to the general election, lost a significant proportion
of votes in the two state polls. It is in this sense still far from becoming
an established party. In the Hesse local elections, however, it is estimated
that the WASG easily cleared the anti-democratic ‘five percent hurdle’
and as a result will be represented on several local councils. Indeed,
it achieved around 9.3% of the vote in Marburg and 7.3% in Frankfurt.
Very good results indeed, even if one takes into account the low turnout.
No doubt the new councillors will be able to promote the party and increase
its profile.
By contrast, in Baden-Würrtemberg, a traditionally conservative region
with the country’s lowest unemployment rate, the WASG managed only 3.1%,
failing to make substantial inroads into the SPD vote. In fact it lost
around 97,000 votes here compared to September’s elections (although then,
of course, voters put their cross next to the Linkspartei name). Rheinland-Pfalz
saw the WASG win 2.5% of the vote in a state where the SPD has dominated
for years. Once more the vote is down massively - a loss of roughly 88,000
votes compared to what the Linkspartei had polled even before it was officially
founded.
An article on the WASG website stresses that “the political left failed
to reach the majority of the voters, who stayed away from the polling
booths” (www.w-asg.de/28+M584c8
bec3a3.html). The article makes clear that the WASG leadership has
been criticising its members for not campaigning hard enough. However,
the disappointing results are more likely to be related to the delay in
merging the two component parts of the new Linkspartei. Indeed, every
day the press is full of reports of the latest squabble.
Unity and the way forward
Friday March 31 will see the end of voting in the referendum within the
WASG on the question of unity with the Linkspartei.PDS. This is certain
to produce a massive ‘yes’. In fact the question was formulated in such
a manner that it was impossible to vote anything but ‘yes’: “Are you in
favour of moving forward the merger process with the Linkspartei.PDS?”
In truth, this is as much about exercising control over the internal
opposition as it is about the merger. The ballot result, many fear, will
be used to sidestep the Berlin WASG, which has decided to stand against
the Linkspartei.PDS in the regional elections in September 2006 - in protest
against its disastrous record as part of the local government coalition.
The ballot put the left in the WASG in a difficult position. After all,
it is well known that the leadership is preparing to use a ‘yes’ result
to ‘punish’ or ‘sanction’ the majority of Berlin comrades in some form
or another. But they could hardly vote ‘no’ - after all, most of the left
recognises the great advantages a new joint left party would have for
the notion of working class independence.
In that sense, I can sympathise with the approach pursued by the Sozialistische
Alternative (SAV, the German section of the Socialist Party’s Committee
for a Workers’ International), which was basically to abstain from the
ballot. The problem is that the comrades were so unsure about this tactic
and its potential impact that they did not tell anybody about it - let
alone try to convince WASG members to do the same. While an active boycott
could - maybe - have shed some light on the balance of forces within the
WASG and the potential to cohere the left, an inactive abstention is a
sign of tactical ineptitude.
However, all this misses the point. It is perfectly possible to stand
for unity while opposing any witch-hunt. Revolutionaries should be at
the forefront of the campaign to ensure the merger goes ahead quickly,
while at the same time condemning the WASG leadership’s bureaucratic control-freakery
and demanding an end to Linkspartei.PDS participation in bourgeois governments.
A critical ‘yes’ vote, in other words.
The confusion over this question is symptomatic of a weak and largely
embryonic opposition within a relatively new organisation. In the run-up
to the crucial WASG conference in Ludwigshafen (April 29-30), the task
of revolutionaries is to organise as a principled opposition within the
party against the manoeuvres of the leadership in its attempt to alienate
and ridicule us. WASG leaders have used the bourgeois press to accuse
its left wing of trying to “split”, “sabotage” and “derail” the whole
project.
It is the duty of principled revolutionaries to take up this struggle
against the leadership now and not hold back on our criticisms
until after the merger. This latter approach is favoured by the Socialist
Workers Party’s German section, Linksruck, which has sided with the leadership
on all major questions. Linksruck raised no objection to the undemocratic
way the ballot was conducted - pre-empting the real debate at Ludwigshafen
- and are apparently in favour of the leadership’s plan to ‘punish’ the
majority of WASG members in Berlin. At least, they have yet to openly
criticise the leadership for its threats.
Taking up the struggle to organise a currently weak opposition is not,
as the leadership suggests, to push sectional or factional interests at
the expense of a new German workers’ party. We are all in favour of a
new workers’ party. But we will argue that this party’s programme
is of prime importance, and if it is to be of any use to the working class,
then it must be based on the ideas of scientific socialism - ie,
Marxism.
If we are not allowed to argue for this, then we will do it anyway. It
is of course true that those arguing for such a party are in a distinct
minority in both parties, but we must organise now with others who oppose
the reformism of the leading elements in the Linkspartei/WASG.
The left should also express its solidarity with the democratic decision
of the WASG in Berlin to stand alone in the September elections. This
can then pave the way for the fight for the right to form factions within
a new organisation - necessary to any working-class organisation
worth its name.
To conceal your criticisms in the name of the unity game (as Linksruck
is doing) is to strengthen the bureaucracy whose aim is to prevent
the establishment of a mass democratic party of the working class. A very
dangerous game indeed.
The same applies over the type of party we need. The fight over
what kind of programme the new formation should have has not really started.
Although various WASG ‘programmatic papers’ clearly demonstrate that the
leadership favours a reformist, neo-Keynesian programme based on empty
platitudes, large sections of the WASG membership have shown their desire
for a more rounded, effective programme. While there might not be a majority
in favour of a Marxist programme, there is a healthy minority that clearly
identify themselves with (some form of) socialism.
Clearly, the Linkspartei would be totally useless if it merely aimed
at becoming a social democracy mark II (but ‘more social’). For a start,
there already is such a party, which - despite losing thousands of members,
supporters, and votes - has rooted relationships with the unions and millions
of supporters within the working class. Why would the masses join a party
that is merely a copy of the old SPD? Especially as it would be a smaller,
less coherent, less effective copy.
This is why the WASG now and the Linkspartei when it comes into existence
in 2007 must reject reformism and all attempts to manage capitalism, which
will inevitably come at the expense of the working class, who are currently
being bled white by the ‘grand coalition’ - in the name of social democracy.
Voter apathy highlights the fact that more and more people are seeing
through the illusion of bourgeois democracy. The question is: can the
WASG and the Linkspartei.PDS offer any solutions out of the current misery?
Or will they merely serve up the same, failed programme of social democracy?
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