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Weekly Worker 623 Thursday May 4 2006
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Berlin haunts proceedings
May 4 2006
Fighting Fund
Record hits
Last
week saw a record number of online readers - no fewer than 25,805
all told. Incredibly this beats the previous week’s total - itself
a record - by over 6,600 hits.
This most encouraging, although perhaps not totally unexpected,
upsurge was not quite matched by an increase in those willing to
contribute to our fighting fund, but I can report that we did receive
three donations via our website, the most notable of which being
a £50 gift from comrade LN. Excellent! Thanks also to RF and SM,
who both chipped in with a fiver.
Together with four cheques received in my mailbag - from AB and
SF (£20 each), KC (£10) and TG (£5), they helped ensure we surpassed
our £600 monthly target. Our total for April was £633 - thank you
all.
Another plus was the number of sales of our paper at various May
Day events - we all but sold out at the London rally. Now we need
to transform some of these one-off sales into subscriptions - and
the most convenient (not to mention inexpensive) way of ensuring
your Weekly Worker arrives on your doormat every week is
by taking out a standing order.
Let’s make May a month to remember for increased subs!
Robbie Rix
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Tina Becker and Ben Lewis report from the April 29-30 conference of
the Wahlalternative Arbeit und Soziale Gerechtigkeit (WASG) in Ludwigshafen.
Intended to smooth the way for unity with the Linkspartei.PDS, it was
marked by discontent, threats and the profound disorientation of the left
opposition
The question of Berlin hung over the conference like a bad smell. Just
five days before, the leadership of the Berlin WASG (politically, though
not numerically, dominated by the Socialist Party’s German section, Sozialistische
Alternative, or SAV) had put in nomination papers for their candidates
in the September local elections. A slim majority of the Berlin membership
had voted to stand independently from the Linkspartei.PDS (the successor
to the former ruling party of East Germany) - to the consternation of
the leaderships of both the WASG and the L.PDS.
For the L.PDS in particular, separate WASG candidates in Berlin could
have serious consequences and even potentially threaten its ability to
renew the disastrous ‘red-red government’ with the social democrats. The
22% it received at the last election four years ago will undoubtedly be
seriously squeezed in the coming elections due to the fallout from its
participation in an extremely unpopular local government. A rival candidate
on the left could reduce its vote even further.
No wonder then that the question of Berlin was the main issue on the
agenda. The run-up to conference was marked by threats and ultimatums
from WASG leaders. Klaus Ernst (joint party secretary) and Ulrich Maurer
(secretary of the joint parliamentary fraction of WASG and L.PDS) threatened
to resign from the WASG and join the L.PDS if the majority of delegates
did not sanction measures against the WASG majority in Berlin. They got
their way by a majority of 163 to 121 votes. Now they have a free hand
to take “all measures necessary” to stop the Berlin comrades from standing
in the September elections. Most people expect that these measures will
include court orders against them and possibly a number of expulsions,
most likely of SAV members.
While we must oppose such moves, it is clear that the SAV has done neither
itself nor the WASG project any favours. Its tactic of insisting on separate
candidates has weakened the opposition: rather than fighting over the
programme of a new joint party in Germany, the left is wasting time and
a lot of effort over what is, in truth, a diversion.
Thus, the keynote speech of Oskar Lafontaine (former leading member of
the SPD and ex-finance minister in the SPD-Green coalition government)
remained totally unchallenged - despite its transparently disingenuous
nature.
Lafontaine and anti-capitalism
This speech was of great interest to the left - or should have been.
In it, he pulled out all the stops to convince the majority to vote with
the leadership over Berlin - though his approach was rather more refined
than the crude blackmailing of Klaus Ernst. But also, both before and
at the conference itself, he was at pains to parade his own ‘left’ credentials
in an effort to placate the opposition within the WASG.
He attacked the current “predatory capitalism” of modern society and
his ‘anti-capitalist’ views formed the central motif. As opposed to the
L.PDS and the majority on the WASG executive, he purports to have developed
a certain scepticism about participation in bourgeois governments and
has been an outspoken critic of the L.PDS record in Berlin: “Would we
have a guilt-free conscience if we were involved in governments at local
and regional levels? I doubt it.” He continued: “Of course, the L.PDS
has neoliberal tendencies, particularly in Berlin - but then again, so
do we.”
His ‘anti-capitalism’ certainly does not translate into ‘pro-socialism’.
Instead, Keynesian measures to “rescue the welfare state” are still the
order of the day. He quoted Jean-Jacques Rousseau several times, including:
“My favourite idea from the great man: that the weak need laws to be free”.
This, of course, contains more than a grain of truth. Strong sections
of the working class fight to win laws which compel the weak, often unorganised,
sections of the working class to limit the competition of workers amongst
themselves. Examples would be minimum pay levels, caps on daily and weekly
hours and health and safety measures. Employers and workers are alike
forced to abide by laws which enhance the collective interests of the
working class. That is not freedom, but it does enhance the fighting capacity
of the working class.
But what Lafontaine seems to have in mind is not working class solidarity
and forcing concessions from the state. He sees the latter as the answer
in and of itself. He envisages a revived social democratic state paid
for by “an increase in the tax rate” (for everybody, it seems, not just
the rich). He said: “My Leitmotif is the modern social state.”
Interestingly, he attacked the “limited vision of the old socialists
on the property question. It is simply not enough to say that the banks
or the energy sector have to be nationalised.” A few socialists in the
room looked at each other in amazement - was he about to put forward the
need for democratic control over nationalised industry? Er… no. He wants
the state to “fix gas prices” and “set a top level for interest rates”.
His anti-capitalism is warmed-up statism.
But it is fair to say that his vision of anti-capitalism did not exactly
enthuse delegates. Only a third of the audience got up to give him a standing
ovation after his 45-minute keynote speech. Some will have been to his
right; others potential recruits for a left opposition.
Predictably, the WASG opposition as currently constituted had absolutely
nothing to say on Lafontaine’s programme of ‘rescuing the welfare state’.
All its interventions focussed on the question of Berlin. This is undoubtedly
an important issue, but the left risks being diverted from effectively
challenging the leadership on the question of politics and programme by
the way this controversy is currently being posed.
Soft and hard opposition
The general political level was extremely poor. Clearly, there are almost
as many eccentric outlooks within the WASG as there are members. Speakers
from various weird and wonderful political backgrounds put forward their
ideas of what the WASG meant to them - a vicar, a few transparent careerists
who could be touting themselves at other conferences tomorrow, a former
secret service agent (proud of his role in helping to bring down the German
Democratic Republic), a police squad leader, etc.
Most of the speeches were agonisingly apolitical, and simply revolved
around ‘I have done this in my local village’ or ‘I know a lot about energy
policies’. Indeed, much to many comrades’ amusement, one candidate was
actually castigated by a member of the conference steering committee for
using his speech “to make political points”. Whatever was he thinking
…?
The poverty of WASG debate is facilitated by the disunity and political
fragmentation of the organised left. The SAV concentrates exclusively
on the question of Berlin and this sect-myopia is pushing it into a block
with the right (see ‘German CWI blocks with right’ in this issue). The
Socialist Workers Party’s German section, Linksruck, uncritically supports
the WASG leadership, argues for a “non-socialist” WASG and has been rewarded
with about a dozen jobs in the Bundestag fraction. Shamefully, these comrades
did little to hide their amusement over an ‘emergency motion’ that argued
for the expulsion of the SAV. In the end, only two delegates voted for
this, with the vast majority voting ‘nein’. Leading Linksruck members,
however, abstained. A scandalous, scabbing position that any comrade with
an ounce of working class morality should feel deeply ashamed of.
Workers Power’s German section, Arbeitermacht, has compounded its laughably
incoherent approach to the WASG by being totally absent from the conference.
The comrades left the WASG a couple of weeks before the merger process
began, then hurriedly rejoined and now seem to have all but disappeared
again. A ‘crisis of leadership’ perhaps, comrades …?
The unorganised left within the WASG drifts rudderless, while
what is organised either digs in its heels on the wrong question
(SAV) or cuddles up to the apparatus (Linksruck). This vacuum will be
filled - the question is, by whom and with what programme?
There is a good chance that we saw the beginning of a soft left opposition
emerging at conference. Three national executive members announced their
resignation from the committee because they did not want to “have to enforce
the decision of this conference” - ie, to take administrative measures
against the comrades in Berlin.
Sabine Lösing (formerly on the Attac national executive), Joachim Bischoff
(an ex-member of the PDS national executive) and Björn Radke had previously
formed a ‘non-organised’ faction on the leadership and criticised the
Berlin government and the L.PDS for its part in it. They have argued against
any administrative measures against the comrades in Berlin, while encouraging
them to withdraw their nominations.
Joachim Bischoff (who rather amusingly - and accurately, in fact - described
unity with the L.PDS as a potential “historic step forward, even if it
is the merger of social democratic crap with reformed Stalinism”) announced
in his resignation speech the formation of “a left network” within the
WASG. It is quite feasible that their ‘soft left’ will attract many of
the critical voices in the organisation, simply because it is the most
coherent opposition - this despite the fact that such forces could be
won to a more radical programme. Bischoff and Radke might be critical
of the heavy-handedness of Klaus Ernst and Oskar Lafontaine - but their
political programme is just as riddled with social democracy and Keynesian
“crap” as the leadership they leave behind.
In the L.PDS, too, some kind of (soft) opposition has started to emerge.
This has been very critical of some of the more openly neoliberal measures
taken by L.PDS politicians in government (like the selling off of the
entire housing stock of the east German city of Dresden). Indeed, the
recent publication For an anti-capitalist left - drafted by more
or less prominent soft-left members of both parties, openly criticises
“a political tendency in the PDS” which, “unaffected by programmatic commitments,
began to stand for a Realpolitik that became very similar to that
of the other neoliberal parties” (www.antikapitalistische-linke.de).
Also interesting in this context are a few developments at the conference
of the L.PDS itself, which took place in Halle (also over the weekend
of April 29-30). For example, Katina Schubert, a vocal supporter of the
privatisation of public housing in Dresden, received only 67.4% of the
vote in her candidacy for the position of vice-chair of the L.PDS. This
is a bad result in a party in which such important posts are normally
confirmed by well over 90% of the membership - just like the good old
days, in fact. Also, a motion moved by local Dresden politician Theresa
Ostrowski that sanctioned the privatisation policy did not receive a single
vote.
That shows how wrong those in the orbit of the SAV are who claim that
the L.PDS cannot change. Sure, the opposition is weak and incoherent.
But the public debate over government participation has helped inject
life back into the L.PDS. This is something that should urgently be addressed
by the socialist left within the WASG, not downplayed or denied.
Radical opposition
The left in both parties must concentrate on the crucial question: gaining
the democratic rights needed to openly and freely make propaganda for
the kind of new left party that is needed by the working class in Germany.
One that concentrates solely on futile attempt to ‘rescue the welfare
state’? Or a party that can provide real answers to today’s big political
questions. Such answers, in our opinion, must be drawn from the genuinely
scientific body of thought that is Marxism.
This is not to deny that important issues are involved in the Berlin
controversy. But neither the WASG’s social democracy nor the L.PDS’s soft-focus
Stalinism are redoubts behind which the left should make some sort of
last stand. Instead, and as we have previously stated, socialists must
fight on two fronts simultaneously.
First, for a rapid merger of these two groupings, thus creating a serious
focus on the left for the working class to resist the present onslaught
against the gains made by the working class in Germany since World War
II. A united party would be seen as the natural leadership for mass protests,
strikes and demonstrations. Struggle itself will teach and overcome many
of the backward ideas and confusions that plague both the WASG and L.PDS.
Second, a vastly wider space for principled working class politicians
to gain a hearing will be created. Marxism, authentic Marxism, can once
again find a mass audience in Germany.
See related articles
Berlin
haunts proceedings
Tina Becker and Ben Lewis report from the April 29-30 conference of the
Wahlalternative Arbeit und Soziale Gerechtigkeit (WASG) in Ludwigshafen.
Intended to smooth the way for unity with the Linkspartei.PDS, it was
marked by discontent, threats and the profound disorientation of the left
opposition
German
CWI blocks with right
It became clear over the weekend that Sozialistische Alternative (SAV),
the German section of the Socialist Party’s Committee for a Workers’ International,
has manoeuvred itself into an untenable position over Berlin.
Tactics
and principle
Tina Becker spoke to Sascha Stanicic, spokesperson of the Socialist Partys
sister organisation in Germany, Sozialistische Alternative (SAV), about
the thorny question of Berlin and the opposition in the WASG
Minimal
wage
The WASG and the L.PDS have launched a campaign for a legal minimum wage
in Germany - but €8 an hour is not enough
Ben
Lewis
CPGB comrade Ben Lewis stood as a candidate in the elections for the six
vacant posts on the WASG national executive
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