The BlogBridging the Gap in German Politics9:59 AM, Mar 7, 2008
• By ULF GARTZKE
Northern Germany's wealthy city-state of Hamburg may soon become home of the country's first-ever Black-Green coalition government involving the conservative CDU party and the environmentalist Greens. If successful at the regional level, such a previously almost unthinkable political configuration could pave the way for future Black-Green coalitions at the national level in Berlin. Both the CDU/CSU parties and the Greens are in dire need of more strategic political space if they want to move beyond the traditional confines of center-right Black-Yellow, leftist Red-Green, and Chancellor Merkel's current CDU/CSU-SPD Grand Coalition governments that have dominated the political landscape for decades but are now increasingly difficult to put together because of the rise of the post-Communist Left party. In particular, the on-going political fragmentation and polarization of Germany's party system--the surging Left is at now an all-time 14 percent high in national opinion polls--has prompted the SPD leadership to embrace populist left-wing positions, primarily in the realm of economic and social policy, but also in terms of foreign policy, where the Left party's pacifist anti-Afghanistan-mission rhetoric is appealing to sizeable parts of German public opinion. At least so far, the strategy has not worked as the SPD's nation-wide polling figures have fallen to an all-time low of 24 percent. Hamburg's state elections held about two weeks ago are symptomatic of Germany's current political stalemate. While the CDU lost its absolute majority, it nonetheless managed to remain the strongest party with around 42.6 percent of the vote. The SPD came in second with 34.1 percent, followed by the Greens and the Left party with 9.6 and 6.4 percent respectively. In this context, Hamburg's wealthy and patrician citizenry explains the Left party's relatively weak showing there. Surprisingly, the free-market FDP party only garnered 4.8 percent of the vote and failed to clear the 5 percent threshold to enter parliament. In the wake of the elections, only three coalition options are feasible. The first one, a CDU-SPD grand coalition, is opposed by the Hamburg conservatives who are eager to avoid the kind of political turmoil that CDU Chancellor Merkel recently had to deal with in Berlin. The second one, a Red-Red-Green coalition involving the SPD and the Greens tolerated or supported by the Left party is not really an option for the SPD folks in Hamburg, who tend to be more on the conservative (and wealthy) side and do not want to be seen as colluding with radical left-wing forces. In Hamburg and nation-wide, major sticking points for future Black-Green coalitions--potentially complemented by the FDP party, which would turn this into a Black-Green-Yellow Jamaica coalition named after the island's national colors--would probably be homeland security and immigration. Both are areas where the Green party leadership and their base (like the SPD, the Left, and even the FDP for that matter) are quite dogmatic, if not naïve, and are only slowly beginning to grasp the need to adapt to the threat posed by Islamist terror. Remember, under the previous Red-Green city-state government, Hamburg served as a logistical base for several of the 9/11 attackers, some of whom posed as university students, before traveling to the United States. Energy policy is another tough political nut to crack. The Greens are determined to stick to current plans to phase out all German nuclear power plants over the next 20+ years whereas CDU/CSU want to leverage the nuclear option in the fight against global climate change. |
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