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Re: [Marxism] Germany: Beginning of a rupture between unions and SPD
- To: Activists and scholars in Marxist tradition <marxism@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
- Subject: Re: [Marxism] Germany: Beginning of a rupture between unions and SPD
- From: Einde O'Callaghan <einde@xxxxxx>
- Date: Mon, 05 Jul 2004 23:22:00 +0200
- User-agent: Mozilla/5.0 (Windows; U; Win98; en-US; rv:1.3) Gecko/20030312
Johannes Schneider wrote:
On Mon, 05 Jul 2004 21:50:19 +0200, Einde O'Callaghan <einde@xxxxxx> wrote:
<snip>
How I wish it were true...
But "the potentially biggest break since the USPD" we are presented at
least every decade in post war Germany: the 'Titoist' UAPD in the early
fifties, the SDS break in 1959, the September strikes in 1969, the
emergence of the Greens and the DS in the early eighties, the PDS after
1989.
I'm afraid that ypu're exhibiting a case of the hand that has been burnt
- whereas I think you underestimate the profundity of teh economic
problems facing the German capitalist class unless there is a revival of
teh eoconomy - and even then the proposed slashing of welfare is going
to effect an enormous number of people - the Hartz IV proposals will
deprive at least 800,000 people who are now receiving benefit of any
benefit whatsoever - and cut the benefits of many more including more
than half the unemployed in former East Germany by more than 50% thro0gh
teh cuts in entitlement for teh "long-term" unemployed - now re-defined
as "unemployed for more than 12 months".
If teh left doesn't get its act together then there are sinister forces
waiting to leap into the breach. Here in Chemnitz the Republicans (a
fascist organisation) were able to gain more than 11% in teh local and
Euro elections in a campaign based on taking up the social questions
being raised by more and more people - but with a nasty racist twist. In
some municipalities the NPD, an even more vicious Nazi party, gained
over 25%, becoming the second-largest party on some local councils -
i.e. potentially the "official opposition".
Here in the East we're at the sharp end of the stick. The ruling class
have been preparing and honing the policies they are now starting to
unleash in the West. the resluts are quite drastic - The SPD vote is
going down the pan - 14% in Thuringia, 10% in "Red" Saxony, the
industrial heartland of the GDR, tendency falling.
<snip>
Actually I doubt there are really that many people "moving from their
traditional allegiances".
So ntehz mass abstention of traditional SPD voters in the Euro elections
doesn't impress you. There was also a mass abstention of CDU voters, but
it wasn't so noticeable because it wasn't as big and the CDU managted to
remain teh biggest party.
In my eyes those behind the SPD dissident
movement rather want to restore the old pre-Schröder SPD.
What they want to achieve and what they can achieve are quite different
things. But if the left is outside this process we'll have absolutely no
effect on what's going to happen
Those who
are moving from the traditional political alliance of SPD and unions is
the present SPD leadership. Schröder and Clement have understood that
their is very little political space for that old reformist SPD and
that they have to transform the SPD into something like the US Democrats.
Since post-war reformism is dead, I consider the SPD dissident's
programme sort of utopian. If Marxist positions should regain any sort
of credibility among the working class and society as a whole, we have
to speak out such unpleasent truth, instead of engaging in the next
illusory project after the Greens and the PDS.
So where are we going to gather the forces that will argue for a Marxist
programme? Abstentionism has never done so - preaching from the
sidelines is always so ineffective.
Einde O'Callaghan
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