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Whatever happened to the Pirates?

8 years ago, the Pirate Party got a million votes in the German elections. This year it was 60,000. What happened?


06/10/2021

One of the less-told stories of the recent German elections was the dog that did not bark. The Pirate Party got 0.1% or just over 60,000 votes. This may not seem particularly newsworthy to anyone new to German politics, but less than 10 years ago, it seemed like the Pirates were on the verge of a serious electoral breakthrough.

In 2009, the first general election in which they stood, nearly a million people voted Pirates and they received a very commendable 2.0% of the vote. This was followed by 2.2% in 2013, as party membership rose to 30,000. Between 2009 and 2011 they won a number of individual council seats and in 2011 they won 8.9% of the vote in Berlin, entering the state parliament. All 15 Pirate candidates were elected.

It seemed that the Pirates were on their way to becoming a serious force. After the Berlin elections, Bild Zeitung ran a headline “Will the Pirates conquer the whole of Germany?” As they continued their electoral successes with 7.4% in Saarland, 8.2% in Schleswig-Holstein, and 7.8% in North Rhine Westphalia, that question did not seem so crazy to ask.

So, what happened? How can we account for the rapid rise and fall of what was, for a brief moment, a national phenomenon?

Freedom Not Fear

One reason for the Pirates’ early success was a series of demonstrations under the banner “Freiheit statt Angst” (Freedom not Fear) organised for data privacy and against the surveillance state. These took place between 2006 and 2015 with an estimated 25,000 demonstrating in 2009. Similar demonstrations were organised in other countries.

The demonstrations were backed by a wide variety of organisations, from ATTAC and the trade union ver.di to Pro-Asyl and the Catholic youth community. It was backed by the Greens, die LINKE and the youth wings of both the SPD and the FDP. And yet in the public consciousness, the Pirates were the party that was most identified with these relatively large mobilisations.

By positioning themselves as the “Netzpartei” (Internet party), the Pirates appeared to be the embodiment of an idea whose time had come.

The limitations of single issue politics

The problems came when the Pirates were forced to take a position on other subjects. The Pirates described their position as “post gender”, arguing that gender is no longer relevant. They rejected the practise of parties like Die LINKE and the Greens of having a certain number of female candidates. Instead, they argued, they selected candidates on merit.

In practise, this meant doing nothing to address sexism and oppression within society. Ulrike Baureithel noted that the Pirates’ position was very similar to those of reactionary “men’s rights” groups, who deny existing discrimination. In her 2013 article The Pirate party and the gender problematic, Manuela Kulick estimated that only around 14% of the Pirates’ leadership at all levels were women, and that the number of female members was even lower.

A further controversy emerged when it was revealed that party functionary Bodo Thiesen had been a Holocaust denier and deputy leader Andreas Popp gave an interview to the far right paper Junge Freiheit. This lost the party members and voters. They issued a statement distancing themselves from right-wing extremism, which lost them further voters.

Whether they tacked to the Right or the Left, the Pirates suffered by taking a position on issues outside their core subjects of Internet politics and surveillance. When they sailed close to the far right, they lost the support of liberals and leftists. But when they disowned this strategy, they lost more conservative support. And yet any party with aspirations to power must take a position on a whole range of issues. In this sense, the fall of the Pirates was always likely.

The downturn of the campaign against state surveillance combined with the lack of clarity regarding the Pirates’ position on most other issues helped start the process which resulted in the Pirates gaining 0.4% in the 2017 general election and just 0.1% this year.

What can we learn?

At their height, the Pirates were able to attract a significant number of people who had not been involved in politics before but wanted to change the world. Sure, the Party always consisted disproportionately of slightly nerdy men, but they made a particular impact on people voting for the first time and people who don’t usually vote.

At least in part, the Pirates owed their success to the idea that they were a members party – everyone could influence policy. In practise, this ended up giving too much power to sexists and those who wanted to flirt with the far right, but the idea that politics is too important to leave to the politicians hit a nerve.

Coalition talks are still ongoing, but it looks like in the near future, both Germany and Berlin will be ruled by “progressive”, “reforming” governments which are unlikely to deliver many reforms. Opposition to these governments will be necessary. We could do worse to regain some of the spirit of the Pirates, without repeating their political mistakes.

“Dreams are not lost just because they can’t be realised”

Interview with Sobo Swobodnik, director of a new film about Class and Class Struggle


05/10/2021

Your film “Klassenkampf” (Class struggle) shows your development from the child of a working-class family in a Swabian village to a film maker and author in Berlin. For those who haven’t seen the film, can you quickly explain your history?

 I grew up in the mid-60s in a Swabian village constricted within the so-called “precariat” – the class of workers, craftsmen and farmers. I was expected to follow a regulated, traditional life. With puberty came politicisation and my first attempt to break out of this milieu. Then civilian service, theatre school, journalism and abandoning my origins, while I was failing to enter the new class or to take root in the new milieu.

You have made a very personal film. How much can we generalise from your experiences? And is that important?

If it were just about me, I wouldn’t have to make a film; that would really be too banal and unimportant. In truth, it’s about more. In this scream, I am a projection screen: my life is an example from which you can generalise. My experiences are also the experiences of many others, of the class politics. But as addressed in Klassenkampf it is based on my life. It explains a social background based on my biography,  as an exemplary representative for many. It is significant that the question of class emerges from these lower classes of society.

You quote several progressive academics and authors, such as Didier Eribon and Annie Ernaux. To what extent do their beliefs correspond with your own?

Didier Eribon’s fantastic book “Returning to Reims” was an awakening for me; and opened my eyes to the fact that so-called “class-ism”, the desire for “social mobility” and all that this entails – isn’t an individual phenomenon but is widespread.

You refer to Eribon’s analysis of the precariat. He says that this term is now used more often than working class. Later, he says that the precariat is the new working class. Does the working class still exist in the old sense of the term? What has changed?

I think that Eribon does that well. He extends the term “working class” and adapts it to contemporary social and political conditions. The class of workers no longer consists of people who have work but above all and in larger numbers people who have no work. What unites them is the precarious conditions in which they must live.

I think that some things regarding this really have changed and shifted. The industrial disputes of earlier years are not as pronounced in the old form. Regarding the class struggle as I understand it, this is now more about individual advancement and not so much about collective goals such as reasonable pay, equal rights etc. which may have been more of a focus of earlier industrial struggles.

The precariat which is shown in the film seems to be very passive. They suffer, possibly more than ever. But according to Eribon they have few opportunities of organising themselves. Back to the title: where can we find class struggle from below at the moment?

Well, something is happening, but not enough. I think that Georg Sesslen gets to the heart of it: “the precariat is the sphere of devalued work and disenfranchised people. It is a class which has no party and no organisation, no project and no consciousness. It is the class of the long-term isolated.”

He than asks about possible consequences: “how would it be if, instead of the precariat fighting itself in its segments, condemning and mistrusting, it began to regard itself as a class? How would it be if the precariat were aware of its strength and recognized itself as a political subject?” I think that then there would be something to win.

You, and many who you quote – have halfway gone over from one class to another. In other words, you don’t seem to feel full comfortable, either with the workers and farmers at home, or with the élites in the world of art. How do you understand class? Is it a feeling, a relationship to the means of production? Or a little of both?

Class is the vessel in which all fragments of identity are contained: cultural, religious, political, gendered, sexual, drifting around in different mixes. 

The class from which I came, is above all characterized from “classism”, that is discrimination because of social origin; the social position goes along with exclusion, stigmatization, discrimination – in the form of education injustice, bad pay, exploitation which was and is apparent in many aspects.

The desire to leave your class of origin is not just because of this, but also because of forms of discrimination within the precariat. I have sensed and experienced racism, misogyny, homophobia, sexism and antisemitism very strongly in my class of origin.

But “social mobility” doesn’t really function. At least, not with me. Somehow I hang in between, between the stools, or – better said – the classes. Which means that I can’t fully escape the old class of origin, but have also not really arrived in the new class. No surprise really: it takes four generations to really carry our this step.

This manifests itself in that I zigzag in my apparent “social mobility”. I feel a traitor to and defector from my class of origin. One who abandons their ideas and principles, and both behind their back and in their eyes betrays them, so that I can take root elsewhere. They really make me feel this whenever I have anything to do with them. They treat me as a deviant, as a refugee, as a crackpot, as one who’s made himself an outcast.

In turn, in the class in which I try to enter, I believe myself to be an imposter, a liar, a fraud, who in principle doesn’t really have the codes, the habitus which this role requires. That despite adopting the signs, the behaviours which are necessary for a lasting imitation. In other words – “how do I deport myself? How do I eat? How do I speak? How cultivated is my conduct? How am I?” 

Eribon, and other authors who you introduce are convinced that fights against oppression like feminism and anti-racism must be central part of class struggle. In her new book, Sahra Wagenknecht argues the opposite – that so-called “identity politics” are a diversion from real struggle. What do you think about that?

I’m afraid that Frau Wagenknecht is mistaken, and I find it at times insidious to play class struggle against the fight against oppression. Quite the opposite: you must think of everything together: class politics, classism, racism, sexism, homophobia, misogyny, antisemitism and other forms of discrimination.

Class dynamics cannot be reduced to the dualism between wage labour and capital. Power and methods of oppression like sexism and racism criss-cross class relations and manifest themselves inside them. You must think of a form of collectivity. One which is not aimed at standardizing internal differences, but much more in recognizing them, which ultimately leads to overthrowing class society.

What can sound theoretical becomes immediately clear in practise. The exploited, migrant cleaning worker, or the dark -skinned care assistant do not stand with both feet in the class struggle, but also have one in the debate about racism and e.g. sexism.

You quote Michael Hartmann when he says that the AfD appeals to the poorest part of the population. But according to a study by the Institute of German economy, AfD supporters are paid above average wages. Who is right here?

Well, for sure in a society characterized by racism, the middle class accounts for supporters of the AfD. Nevertheless I believe (and Hartmann verifies it in his study) that that there is definitely a relationship between precarious existences and resentment against strangers.

This is also my experience from my milieu of origin. The separation from what is believed to be foreign was always strong and always there, even when the “foreigners” didn’t directly affect your life. This meant that there was a deeply felt rejection of migrants, although no or few migrants came into our area, The same was so with antisemitism. The AfD is quite consciously and successfully fishing in these murky brown waters.

I agree with most of your arguments, at least in part, and where I have a different opinion, you film has made me think. But one thing didn’t convince me. Shortly before the end, you quote Hermes Phettberg, who says that we must avoid class and retreat to a classless, role-free parallel world of art.

But class isn’t a choice. Most of us work because we must survive. It seems to me that a parallel world of art is a luxury that the majority can’t afford. Or have I misunderstood something?

That is meant to be naturally provocative, also exaggerated, and to a degree meant ironically. The deep-rooted desire to leave these class relationships behind you needs that you deny this class dynamic. This denial, which really seems only available to those who can afford it, also appears to be a privilege, although the real income and living conditions of those who take it is usually close to precarity.

You ask another question shortly before the end of the film: what is to be done? What would be your answer to this question?

Hmm – that is a good, and I think the decisive question. Here I must elaborate a little. The currently dominant criticism of classism – is not aimed at ending class society, but only at a superficial resolution of class antagonism. Those who have become successful are more willingly accepted by those who are longer established and they should then always be friendly to waiting staff and postal workers.

If the latter try hard, they should also be allowed to rise. But this criticism of classism, most definitely does not suggest class struggle, as all demands remain immanent within the system. This is how classism is currently treated socially. I find that this does not go beyond the paradigm of acknowledgement and does not lead to a transition. That can only be achieved by a structural change to the production of misery.

This means: respect doesn’t pay any bills. Or as the Slovenian philosophy rebel Slavoj Zizek says: recognition, respect and attention to workers is only cosmetic for the oppressed class. I also think that the recognition as class probably and ultimately will not lead to a peaceful coexistence of classes. Quite the opposite: it will thus be more accepted as “normal“, as “natural“ and not as something that must be abolished as soon as possible. The fight for economic redistribution is reduced to a cultural question of respectful behaviour. 

It would probably be more effective to abolish classes by changing the system. Exploitative neoliberal capitalism, in which very few acquire wealth and prosperity at the cost of the overwhelming majority, must be eliminated.

Capitalism does not just destroy most people worldwide – tramples on their worth and living conditions – but it also rigorously and systematically destroys nature and the environment. It seems to me that the end of capitalism is a precondiition, not just to defeat classism but also to deal with other forms of discrimination.

If the gap between poor and rich is removed; if a just redistribution happens, the common good stands in the foreground; if participation is not just a word but seriously implemented.. equal rights and community spirit are strengthened; sustainability and the defence of nature and the animal kingdom is a decisive factor on which all human actions orientate – Then not only are classes obsolete – But life for EVERYONE will be more worth living.

In this regard we come self-evidently to an overdue dismantling of all discriminations, as well as the fossil resources. Renewable energies are the only ones that we should consider. Basic income is standard, as are equality of education, equal treatment and equal rights. This leads to expropriation of exorbitant private wealth from corporations, and nationalisation of the essential social and political areas – health, education, housing, energy, land, mobility etc.

For many people, this scenario may seem to be a utopia that sounds like a fairy tale, but who is against fairy tales? Dreams are important – they are not lost just because they can’t be realised. They will always be there. At least, the East German Heiner Müller believed this a long time ago. As ever, he is correct.

How and when can we see Klassenkampf? Is there also a possibility for people who don’t speak good German?

The preview premiere was on Friday, 1st October in the Volksbühne Berlin. The cinema release is then in selected German cinemas from 7th October. In some cinemas, the film will be shown with English subtitles. You can find out more on the homepage.

Editor Note: This was edited at points for clarity.

Germany Elects Merkel’s Successor – Catastrophe for DIE LINKE

The causes for the defeat of DIE LINKE in the German elections go deeper than electoral tactics


04/10/2021

The German elections of Sunday 26th September were dominated by the question of who would succeed Merkel as chancellor. The improbably bad performance of CDU/CSU candidate Armin Laschet enabled Olaf Scholz (SPD) to become the sudden favourite, without having a clear profile of his own. To the extent that DIE LINKE featured at all in the debates, the main issue was what positions the left party should give up to enable the election of a centre-left government.

The CDU/CSU lost 9 percentage points. With 24,1% of the vote, the Christian Democrats suffered their worst ever electoral defeat. The SPD won 5,2% against the long term trend and achieved their best result since 2005. The Greens gained 5,8 percentage points to land at their best result ever with 14,8%. The liberals of the FDP also won slightly and rose to 11,5% of the vote. The AfD lost 2,3 percentage points and fell to 10,3%. However, the AfD also managed to become the biggest party in most of Saxony, the southern half of Thuringia and the southern tip of Sachsen-Anhalt. DIE LINKE lost 4,3 percentage points and ended up below the election threshold of 5,0%, only returning to the Bundestag thanks to three direct mandates in Berlin and Leipzig.

The Centre Left

The victory of the SPD and the Greens indicates that many people are looking for change. The rise of the massive climate movement over the last years, in which over 600.000 people participated, electorally mostly played into the hands of the Greens. The SPD carried out a relatively left wing campaign despite their candidate Olaf Scholz, who was one of the architects of the neoliberal labour and welfare reforms under the Schröder government and a hardline mayor of Hamburg. This way the SPD could win 1,5 million voters (net) from the CDU/CSU and at the same time half a million from DIE LINKE.

For DIE LINKE, the direction of the campaign turned a precarious situation into a perfect storm, in which only the most loyal supporters cast their vote for the socialists. Many former LINKE voters gave their vote to Olaf Scholz in order to keep Armin Laschet from becoming chancellor. At the same time, DIE LINKE lost almost half a million votes to the Greens. The longing for a centre-left government that takes the environment seriously will have played a crucial role in this.

In the last weeks of the campaign, there was pressure on DIE LINKE to make early concessions in the interest of a possible government with the SPD and Greens, for example by giving up the demand to disband and replace NATO. The party wing that favours coalition governments most, around fraction co-chair Bartsch and party co-chair Henning-Wellsow, took this up to prepare DIE LINKE for “red-green-red”. Instead of lambasting the SPD and Greens for their neoliberal realpolitik, the party leadership made repeated offers of left cooperation to the SPD and Greens, who snubbed the socialists in return. After the Taliban conquered Kabul, DIE LINKE tellingly refrained from attacking the SPD and Greens for supporting the war all those years. That didn’t save DIE LINKE from ending up on the defensive herself for not supporting the last “rescue mission” of the Bundeswehr.

Causes of the defeat of DIE LINKE

The causes for the defeat of DIE LINKE go deeper than electoral tactics, though. In great swathes of former East Germany, where party structures have been rotting for ages and the average age of members continues to rise, the party is nowhere near as present as it used to be. Neither has the party managed to take root and establish permanent LINKE structures in many cities, and especially rural areas, in the former west.

The Covid pandemic also created problems for DIE LINKE. Pandemic prevention measures made organising harder and eroded strong social ties that we depend on when campaigning. But DIE LINKE did not become a widely recognised voice of solidarity and public health during the pandemic. The Bundestag fraction could not keep pace with the developments and failed to find a common denominator on the question of pandemic prevention. The well thought-out plans and motions that the fraction eventually produced over the course of 2020 and 2021, that included hundreds of billions of Euros for health care, education, social security, public transport and a left Green New Deal hardly featured in the press at all and never reached the electorate. Furthermore, Sahra Wagenknecht kept publishing dubious videos spreading doubt over Covid-vaccinations and evidently flirting with the sizeable number of “corona-sceptics” amongst her supporter base.

In addition, the ongoing fights inside the party which the media are always glad to highlight, did the party no favours. Especially the conflict between the supporters of Sahra Wagenknechts national-chauvinistic (and increasingly economically liberal) course on the one hand and comrades championing internationalism, active anti-fascism and anti-racism, LGBTIQ solidarity, feminist and ecological socialist politics on the other, but also the rift between advocates and opponents of coalition politics played a role here.

The Way Forward

An exception to the national trend for DIE LINKE is Berlin, where people elected not just the Bundestag, but also the Berlin parliament, the so called Abgeordnetenhaus, as well as the city district councils and voted in the successful Berlin referendum to expropriate housing corporations with in total 240.000 housing units. Despite participating in the Berlin government, DIE LINKE only lost 1,6% in the Abgeordnetenhaus election and ended up with 14% of the vote – a stark contrast to the Berlin result for the Bundestag, in which DIE LINKE lost over 7 percentage points, falling to a dismal 11,4%.

In areas where DIE LINKE is especially rooted in movements, in the neighbourhood and in the referendum initiative “Expropriate Deutsche Wohnen and Co”, like in Neukölln, Kreuzberg, Wedding, Charlottenburg or north Treptow, the party was even able to win slightly in the Berlin and local elections. The fact that DIE LINKE was the only party to forcefully support the immensely popular initiative helped stave off catastrophe, just like the party’s standing in the anti-fascist movement.

By supporting the strike movement in the Berlin hospitals over the last years, DIE LINKE was also able to make inroads into the fighting sections of the working class instead of anaemically complaining about the disappearing support in the working class. In this way, DIE LINKE Neukölln could win the best result in former West-Germany with 11,9% for the Bundestag and 14,3% for the Abgeordnetenhaus. In Treptow-Nord, the movement oriented Katalin Gennburg managed to defend her direct mandate for the Abgeordnetenhaus with 26,2%, in a district that was believed lost to Die LINKE just a few years ago.

This means that DIE LINKE can realise its potential when the party gives up the fixation on parliaments as the primary political terrain and the main instrument for social change, and instead focuses her energy on building movements and strikes. How that can work in practice will be very different from locality to locality. But it is clear that DIE LINKE has to radically change course if the party is to play a significant role in the crisis-riddled times to come.

This article first appeared in Dutch on the website socialisme.nu. Translation: Freek Blauwhof

German Elections. Why did Die Linke do so badly?

A combination of fear of the CDU, the Left’s inability to criticize potential coalition partners and a move away from social movements combined to hurt the party in the recent elections


03/10/2021

In the recent German elections, die LINKE did not even attain the 5% of votes which would guarantee a parliamentary fraction. They were only saved by an abstruse rule which says that if 3 party candidates win their own constituency, you get a fraction anyway. Die Linke will be still represented in the next parliament, but with a much reduced number of 39 MPs.

There is no single reason why die Linke lost 2 million votes. In this article I will concentrate on three – the desire of a large part of the public to avoid a Chancellor Laschet, a Linke election campaign that almost exclusively concentrated on a “Red-Red-Green” (R2G) coalition, and the fight inside the party around Sahra Wagenknecht. I will address each of these in turn.

Stop Laschet

Armin Laschet was the CDU’s chosen representative to succeed Angela Merkel, who combined neoliberal politics with an appearance of being “smarter, likely more compassionate and likeable, than her peers”. Laschet had little to recommend him apart from his claim to be Merkel’s natural heir. In other words, the same old politics, but without Merkel’s personal following.

Very quickly strong support emerged among the electorate for “anyone but Laschet”. This helped first the Greens under Annalena Baerbock, and later the SPD’s Olaf Scholz who made a tack to the left, producing election posters promising a minimum wage of €12, protecting the climate, stable pensions and affordable housing.

Theoretically, a vote for die Linke would have been the best way of preventing a Laschet Chancellorship. The German Chancellor is not necessarily the leader of the party which wins the most votes, but one who is supported by a majority of MPs. So, as long as left parties won enough MPs between them, Laschet would not get in, ever if the CDU/CSU got more votes than any other party.

And of the “left parties”, die Linke was the only one which categorically ruled out going into government with the CDU. The CDU did not just rule out a coalition with die Linke, they also called on the SPD and Greens to do the same. Meanwhile, the SPD and Greens have been more than happy to enter coalitions with Laschet’s party.

The SPD was already in a coalition with the CDU in the national government as well as in the regional parliaments of Mecklenberg-Vorpommern, Saarland and Sachsen-Anhalt. The Greens are in coalitions with the CDU in Baden-Württemberg, Hessen, Schleswig-Holstein and Lower Saxony. Both parties rule together with the CDU in Brandenburg and Saxony. That makes 9 regional parliaments out of 16, where either the Greens or the SPD are already in a coalition with the CDU.

But in the heads of many voters, only the SPD and Greens could stop Laschet as they were the only parties with their own candidate for Chancellor. Many Linke activists in the election campaign report talking to voters who said they feel closest to die Linke politically, but needed to vote SPD (or Green) this time to prevent Laschet.

Rot-Rot-Grün (R2G)

Despite a radical manifesto, the Linke election campaign focussed almost exclusively on a future governmental coalition with the Greens and the SPD. Parliamentary leader Dietmar Bartsch campaigned for a “progressive alliance” with the Greens and SPD, as did the left of the party under the slogan “rebellisch regieren” (rule rebelliously). In practise this meant not criticising potential coalition parties.

As election day came closer, this message was slightly refined. At the final election rally on 24th September in Berlin, speakers from all wings of the party made roughly the same appeal. The SPD and Greens were considering making a coalition with the FDP, but only Die Linke would guarantee that they would keep their promises.

At the rally, elder statement Gregor Gysi explained his idea of responsible government. The SPD had campaigned in the election for a €12 minimum wage. The Linke was for €13. The SPD promise was insufficient, said Gysi, but would be a step in the right direction and would benefit millions of workers. Of course he’s right – for some workers in the East it would mean a 25% wage rise – but that was no argument why people should vote Linke instead of SPD.

Compromise on NATO

Then there was the question of NATO. The US defeat in Afghanistan in the middle of the election campaign should have been a godsend to the one party with anti-imperialist aspirations. The Afghanistan war was started under an SPD-Green government which willingly sent German troops.

Both the SPD and the Greens refused to even enter coalition talks with die Linke unless the Linke rejected the opposition to NATO. Opposition to imperialist war has always been a cornerstone of the party’s politics. And the failure of NATO politics was currently being played out in Kabul. If ever there was a chance of showing the difference between the Linke on one side, and the SPD and Greens on the other, this was it.

The Linke’s actual response was to insist that NATO shouldn’t be at a barrier to a coalition. Party leader Susanne Henning-Wellsow even said that she was “open” to the deployment of German troops. At the aforementioned rally, both Bartsch and Gysi said “they say we want to abolish NATO – that’s not true”. None of the speakers from the Left of the party contradicted them.

Bartsch explained to MDR radio: “Die Linke won’t make it a condition that we leave NATO before we speak. No, we enter talks.” Even left wing party leader Janine Wissler gave an interview with WDR radio saying that die Linke wasn’t calling for an exit from NATO, and that “it’s not true that we don’t want a security alliance”. The sofortprogramme (emergency programme) issued by die Linke just before the election did not mention NATO once.

This unclarity on NATO and Afghanistan was not helped by one of the final votes in the Bundestag. This called for both support of deploying German troops in Afghanistan and for the evacuation of German citizens stuck in Kabul. In this context, the Linke call on its MPs to abstain was arguably the right decision. But it did not help promote die Linke as an explicitly anti-imperialist party.

This apparent flexibility towards principle around NATO had wider effects. As election analyst Horst Kahrs argued in neues deutschland, “mustn’t the nurse, who die Linke promised a higher wage, ask the question whether this issue could also be sacrificed to inner-party identity politics?”

Wagenknecht

And then there was Sahra Wagenknecht. Wagenknecht is one of the most popular Linke representatives for the media. She’s an articulate speaker and a regular guest on chat shows. I have already written two lengthy articles on Wagenknecht (which you can read here and here), so I’ll try to be brief here.

At the beginning of the election campaign, Wagenknecht released a book called “Die Selbstgerechten” (the self-righteous) which attacked “skurille Minderheiten” (peculiar minorities) and dismissed movements like Fridays for Future as being symptomatic of middle class lifestyle politics. Around the same time, Wagenknecht was announced as the leading candidate for the Linke in North Rhine Westphalia (NRW) after a very polarised vote.

The fact that die Linke did no better in NRW than elsewhere – the percentage of the vote exactly halved from 6.4% to 3.2% – did not cause Wagenknecht to reconsider her position. On election evening she appeared on television to say “in recent years, the Linke has increasingly moved from why it was actually formed, namely representing the interests of normal workers and pensioners.”

The main cost of Wagenknecht’s intervention was probably not in voters, but in activists and multipliers. More than any other parties, Die Linke, which has no large financial backers, needs committed members and supporters to lead an effective election campaign. Covid had already reduced the opportunities of waging an active campaign on the streets. But equally important was the fact that many good activists just refused to come out for Die LINKE.

Many people, in particular People of Colour, who would normally call their friends to vote for Die Linke said that they did not want to be associated with Wagenknecht’s racism. When Fridays For Future (FFF) Leipzig tweeted a criticism of Wagenknecht’s quote that die Linke was in danger of becoming the “party of the Fridays for Future milieu”, the Tweet got over 6,000 likes and over 400 retweets.

It is hardly surprizing that many FFF activists were reluctant to campaign for her party, even though the SPD and Greens had nothing concrete to offer them. When climate activists went on hunger strike, Scholz promised to speak to them “after the election” and Baerbock criticized them for using the wrong method of dialogue.

On purely anecdotal evidence, I have a number of friends who are not party members but are heavily involved in political discussions. Normally, they are enthusiastic in their support for die Linke. This time round, I’m not sure that they even voted Linke (in fact, I know that some of them didn’t). This phenomenon may be more pronounced in liberal Berlin, but it had an impact everywhere.

So, why did die LINKE lose over 2 million votes?

The post mortems are starting to flow in. Former party leader Klaus Ernst posted a tweet which he called a “warning shot” against “a left party that is barely anchored among workers, but walks behind every movement, wants to be greener than the Greens, for open borders for all, and argues that it should throw out Wagenknecht”.

Meanwhile an article in Jacobin claimed that “A party, especially a socialist party, needs to be more than a collection of social movements. It must bundle the voices of a diverse working class in city, town and country, migrant and nonmigrant alike — but more than that, it must articulate them as a common interest. For years, Die Linke clearly hasn’t aspired to this aim — with politics by and for the working class falling out of fashion. Sunday’s defeat was the electoral outcome of this longstanding neglect of class formation.”

Both arguments are based on an unwelcome but undeniable statistic. In the 2021 election, 6.6% of trade unionists voted for die LINKE. In 2009 this was 17.1%. This is particularly worrying in a year that has seen a slight upturn in industrial activity – in the railways, in the hospitals and in retail. Despite this, die LINKE has not been able to replace the SPD as the party that most trade unionists feel as “their own”.

But how should we deal with this problem? The Jacobin article goes on to argue that die Linke:

“has to develop a political vision that connects with significant sections of mainstream society, not just specific, highly politicized subcultures. Sadly, those within the party who have in recent years called for outreach to the working class in its full diversity, including the unemployed and older workers, have been shouted down and denigrated as reactionaries.”

“Those within the party” referred to here are people like Wagenknecht who have talked about “outreach to the working class” as a way of arguing that the party programme needs to be more racist.

As Horst Kahrs said when asked about Klaus Ernst’s tweet: “I find the aim of such statements to be utterly wrong. And they also do not correspond to the reality in the party. What are “movements”? If it is for example about the rent cap and Fridays for Future, then these are the social concerns which are an important integral part of left wing politics. I think that the problem is that older party members no longer understand how younger members view things.”

Social movements vs. working class needs

I think that the fundamental problem is that Ernst, Alexander Brentler (who wrote the Jacobin article) and Wagenknecht all try to make an artificial distinction between social movements on the one hand and the needs of the working class on the other – as if saving the planet and fighting racism are middle class luxuries.

But the working class does not just consist of elderly white man. Many working class people are victims of racism or young people who will inherit a planet which has been ruined by man-made global warming. To suggest that supporting social movements which are fighting this is somehow against working class interests is just crazy talk.

Let’s look at 3 of the important social movements that emerged in the last 18 months.

In May 2020, in the middle of the Corona crisis and on the anniversary of George Floyd’s murder, at least 15,000 people demonstrated in Berlin in support of Black Lives Matter. This demonstration was young, inexperienced, racially mixed and very working class. The train from the multi-racial working class Wedding district to the demo was full of young people who you don’t normally see on demonstrations.

In Summer this year, at least 15,000 demonstrated for Palestine. This may not seem large compared to other countries, but it was the largest pro-Palestine demo in Germany in a generation, probably longer. Many of the demonstrators were not eligible to vote, but they could have been the core of an active election campaign. Then party leader Dietmar Bartsch joined representatives of other parties at a rally for Israel.

Two days before the elections, 620,000 demonstrated throughout Germany as part of the international climate strike. Although the Greens were nominally associated with this movement, their programme for a Green capitalism was clearly insufficient to address the urgent problems. If die Linke were more willing to criticise the Green programme, if Wagenknecht had just shut up, then maybe things would have been different.

A problem with deeper roots

The Linke’s inability to adequately relate to social movements did not start at the 2021 election campaign. In 2015, during the “refugee crisis”, the party passed a conference vote clearly expressing its opposition to border controls. Wagenknecht was part of the very small minority who opposed the vote. Her response was to launch Aufstehen, nominally a German version of the Yellow Vests, but which focussed on restricting freedom of movement.

What this did in the short term was to give the impression that in the middle of a great national discussion about refugees, die Linke was split down the middle – some of its members were for open borders, others argued that refugees dragged down the wages of “German” workers.

This seriously damaged the reputation of die Linke in the pro-refugee movement. In 2018, unteilbar (indivisible) organised a demonstration of 240,000 people in Berlin. Yet at the same time, many refugee activists were saying they could not vote Linke, and certainly not campaign for the party, because of Wagenknecht, who openly distanced herself from unteilbar.

The result was that two parties saw significant surges in their support. The AfD – a racist anti-migrant party, started to gain potential votes from CDU voters. And the Greens were perceived by many people to be the pro-refugee party – despite their clearly racist positions towards refugees in states like Baden-Württemberg where they were in office.

In the end, refugee politics seems to have played a remarkably small role in the recent elections. But this surge for the Greens – coupled with the Fridays for Future demonstrations – meant that they were suddenly discussed as possible government candidates. Die Linke, meanwhile, stagnated. In 2015, die Linke had 59,000 members, In 2019, despite the flurry of political activity, party membership had remained relatively constant at just over 60,000.

Rays of hope: Neukölln, Wedding and the housing referendum

In the elections, some areas bucked the national trend. In Berlin-Neukölln, an area where die Linke has worked productively inside social movements, there was a minor fall in the vote in the general election, but a 2.7% increase in the local elections which were happening at the same time. This resulted in an increase in the number of Linke city councillors in Neukölln.

My district of Berlin-Wedding does not have the size and resources of Neukölln but we polled similar results, particularly in the North of Wedding where I live. There are 7 constituencies in the district of Mitte. In the 2 constituencies in North Wedding, the Linke vote increased by 2.1% (for the candidate) and 2.3% (for the party) in one constituency, and 3.1% and 3.5% in the other.

In fact, while the party was haemorrhaging votes on a national level, the vote in the whole of Berlin also fell – but “only” from 20.3% to 14.3% This was because of the evening’s Good News story – the overwhelming victory of the Deutsche Wohnen Enteignen (DWE) referendum to expropriate the big landlords as a step towards achieving fairer rents in Berlin.

We have covered the referendum comprehensively on theleftberlin.com, so I won’t add much here, other than to say that it was a vibrant campaign which mobilised thousands of Berliners in a range of activities from demonstrations and door-to-door house visits to collecting signatures and cheerleading. This was not a passive campaign, but one of self-activity.

56.4% of Berlin voters – over a million people – voted for expropriation (if the million voters excluded from voting, largely because they’re not German citizens, were allowed to vote, this figure would have been much higher). And yet the fact remains that only a quarter of these people voted for die Linke, even though die Linke was the only major party which unambiguously supported the referendum.

The Greens gave grudging support, insisting that they would only expropriate as a last report. Baerbock expressed her opposition. The SPD leader – Berlin’s new mayor Franziska Giffey – said that she opposed the referendum. This means that whatever the result of coalition talks, a majority of members of the new Berlin government will belong to parties that are at best lukewarm about implementing the referendum result.

So why the low result for die Linke? Of course activity in social movements does not automatically transfer into election results, but there are two more fundamental reasons. Firstly, the Linke’s reluctance to criticize the SPD and Greens on national level also took place on a local level. Linke politicians stayed quiet on their potential coalition partners’ lack of support for one of the most important initiatives that the city has ever seen.

There was also the experience of the forerunners to die Linke, the PDS, who were part of an earlier Berlin government which privatised 70,000 apartments. People who remembered this were wary of once more supporting Die Linke in government. Similarly, die Linke has opposed the eviction of social projects in Berlin like Liebig 34, while being part of the government which carried them out.

Whatever happens, nearly 60% is a figure that is difficult to ignore, and Berliners will enter the new legislative period with a fight on their hands. The campaign Deutsche Wohnen & Co Enteignen will continue and it is exactly in places like Neukölln and Wedding that Linke activists who were active in the campaign have done the most to regain lost trust.

What now?

There is still an important place for Die Linke in the national political debate. This means taking clear positions against rent rises, for a national rent cap, and for an anti-imperialist politics which rejects NATO. We also need to take on more controversial policies like supporting open borders and opposing the headscarf ban.

In some places, this means a change of practise. Die Linke’s participation in governments which gentrify Berlin and deport refugees in Thüringen damages its credibility.

At the same, there is little virtue in sitting in small rooms, only talking to people who agree with our full revolutionary programme. Young people are joining die Linke because they want to change the world. Die Linke Newsletter reported that more than 600 people had joined the party in the three days after the election. This is a figure that we can build on, but only if die Linke remains active between elections.

This means not just supporting social movements with money and fine words, but being centrally involved in building these movements and recruiting the best activists. Where we have done this in the Deutsche Wohnen & Co campaign – in Neukölln, in Wedding and in the Right2TheCity group of non-Germans – we have strengthened both the campaigns and the local Linke.

During the election campaign, I heard of people joining the party in Wedding on a weekly basis – almost all were in their twenties and had been radicalised by Black Lives Matter, Fridays for Future and the like. In the new Berlin government, die Linke will be represented by radical left-wing migrant voices like Ferat Kocak and Elif Eralp who embody what left wing politics could and should be like.

On the day before the election, I was approached on a stall by a man who invited us to give out leaflets at his mosque. In a district with a lot of Muslims, we have had some disputes in the branch about the importance of actions at mosques. With the influx of new members, we already had one successful action during the election campaign, and intend to continue after the elections. This will help to anchor the party in the local community and win new multipliers.

The fights to come

Socialists may know that the SPD and Greens are neoliberal parties who offer little hope of positive change, but in popular consciousness the election results show a shift to the Left. People have voted for these parties with expectations – particularly around social issues and the environment. If and when these expectations are not met, there is the potential for further struggles.

Some of these struggles are already on the agenda. In Berlin, SPD mayor Franziska Giffey will try to avoid implementing the demands of the referendum on expropriating big landlords. Legally, the referendum was only “advisory”, but a clear majority and a large and lively movement mean that if she does falter, she will meet serious resistance.

The immediate response of the Berlin Linke leadership to this threat is to demand that a coalition government contains Linke representatives who can hinder any attempts by Giffey and the Greens to backtrack. Yet history has shown that where die Linke and its predecessor parties joined a government which disappointed its voters, they ended up on the wrong side of the struggle and were punished for this by activists who felt betrayed. This must not happen again.

Meanwhile things could be hotting up on the industrial front. The Financial Times recently reported that “increasing numbers of German workers are demanding higher pay amid rising inflation, with some going on strike”. Inflation has reached a 29 year high of 4.1% and the Kurzarbeit scheme which protected some wages under Covid is currently being rolled back.

If die Linke actively supports these strikes – and if Linke members help lead the strikes – we can both overcome the deficit in trade union support and challenge the false dichotomy between trade union struggle on the one side and social movements on the other. Successes for the trade unions can strengthen the confidence of social movements to go onto the offensive (and vice versa).

A way forward was offered in a statement by some prominent party members “with migration background” published after the election:

“We need a consistent social voice, a voice which points out the local and international devastation of capitalism and develops alternatives. A voice which fights for progress and reforms today, and acts together with the progressive movements of recent years. Fridays for Future, initiatives like Deutsche Wohnen & Co Enteignen and the many tenants initiatives, unteilbar and Seebrücke, Black Lives Matter, the Berlin hospital movement, social organisations and trade unions are our partners in the fight for a juster, more ecological world free of discrimination. We must continue along this path, we must win new active members, build the party and anchor ourselves in local districts and communities. This anchoring is only possible if people are clear what we stand for.”

It is in the nature of Die Linke that there will always be a tension between the people who want to change the world from below and those who just want to be a better version of the existing Social Democratic and Green parties. It may be that at some time we need to break away and create something new. For the meantime, let’s fight for a mass party that speaks for and builds the social movements.

Thanks to Rafael Apel Marcel, Dave Gilchrist, Zoran Maric, Carol McGuigan and Rosemarie Nünning for commenting on an early version of this article

A Hard Loss and a Triumph

The German elections were a significant defeat for die LINKE. What happens next is crucial


02/10/2021

Germany’s long election campaign, full of ups and downs, marked the end of 16 more or less placid years with Angela Merkel, 67, and her Christian double party, known as the “Union” (its Bavarian component stays somewhat separate). Until now it had joined up with the Social Democrats (SPD) as increasingly uncomfortable junior partners. But now, without Angela, her unlucky Union followers ended up with the worst vote in their history (24.1 %) and an embarrassing second place.

They were edged out by their SPD ex-partners, headed by Olaf Scholz, 63, with 25.7%. A pillar of the right wing of his party, he is burdened by shady corruption scandals from his earlier days as mayor of Hamburg and his recent years as Minister of Finance. But his confident, nonchalant personality and his party’s position as lesser evil won out after an amazing upward swoop from its hand-wringing debility and despondency less than a year ago.

But to head a new government a majority of the Bundestag seats is necessary. In the past this always required a twosome. But the big chamber, jammed with 735 deputies, is now split up among six (or seven parties if one counts the Bavarian “Christians” separately), making it almost impossible for even two parties to reach a majority; so Olaf Scholz now needs two partners for a threesome. If his attempts fail, the Christians would get the option, and if they can harness up such a troika, they might still get to drive the ruling sleigh despite their second pace in the voting. Their losing leader Armin Laschet is still pressing  a political defibrillator with such hopes, but many in his Union blame him for the defeat and now prefer to drop him and his dreams of reversing fate. In this case, fate depends on two smaller parties – the Free Democrats and the Greens – who must join three-player Skat with the Union or with the SPD.

The two always disliked each other. The Free Democrats (FDP), openly and unashamedly favor untaxed, unregulated big business and they downplay ecology. Perhaps due to a well-spoken leader who skilfully sold voters on pure “trickle-down” economics with “digitalization”, the FDP shinned upward to an unexpectedly high 11.5%.

The Greens long scorned such reactionaries. But now, increasingly conservative,  they have become  friendlier with sectors of big business, especially auto giants like Daimler and Porsche. After an amazing but very brief stay at the top of the ladder in the polls, they slipped back to a far more modest 14.8%, which was still the best in their history. So now, with the Free Democrats smelling a chance at some of those warm, comfortable, perk-laden cabinet seats they have done without for so many years, the two seem to be smoothing over differences and will most likely opt for Olaf. We should soon know their decision.

What about the other two Bundestag parties? The Alternative for Germany (AfD) has now chosen two co-chairs; one from the ranks of more rabid pro-fascists, the other from its cultivated all-for-democracy (“Who? Us Nazis?°) wing, only slightly embarrassed when the other wing betrays all too soon its genuine beliefs and plans. Although the rabid wing won alarming first places in two East German states (Saxony 24.6% and Thuringia 24%), on the national level they only just held on to a two-digit result (10.3%) – far too high but far less than they expected and down 2.3% from 2017. As yet, no other party dares to have anything to do with them.

Disaster for Die LINKE

The most important election result is hardly discussed in the media – and when it is, then with satisfaction or joy. It is, in fact, a truly sad result; DIE LINKE (The Left) came out worst of all the Bundestag parties, losing about two million votes, getting barely over half the 9,2 % it received in 2017 (when it became the leading opposition party) and coming close to losing its entire status in the Bundestag, which requires a vote total of at least 5% in the national vote. The Left, with only 4.9%, was just saved from total defeat by a special rule in Germany’s complex election rules, which I had better explain here:

When Germans vote they make two crosses on their ballots; first, for a candidate in their own district, second, for the party they prefer. The winner of the first vote gets a seat directly. The percentage a party obtains in the second vote determines how many seats it will receive, even if it doesn’t win out in a single district. Who gets these seats is decided by a list chosen by each party before the election; the more crosses obtained in that second column, the more of the nominees on the list will get a seat. If 5% is not reached nationally then none on the list get in, but only those – if any – who won out on their own in their own district. It’s a complicated system but does guarantee smaller parties a voice – if they can reach 5%.

Sadly, the Left missed that red line level – but was miraculously saved by a special rule; if three or more delegates of a party win out in their own districts – with those first crosses – then their parties and their proportionate lists are saved, just as if they had reached 5%. And, thanks be to God or some secular deity, the Left managed to barely squeeze through. Two candidates won seats in (East) Berlin and another in eastern Germany’s second city, Leipzig. Its 4.9% will thus get it 39 seats, far less than the previous 69, but enough to form a caucus with all of its rights, rooms, staff jobs and privileges.

This near total disaster, saved by a thin thread, is of great importance. Germany, the most powerful country in Europe, is intent on economic and military expansion on a scale second only to the USA (and/or China). In a quest for supremacy it still plays second fiddle to the Pentagon and Wall Street but is aiming at bass viol strength. All the German parties support these endeavors, all have ties, some very close, some more complex, with powers-that-be like Bayer-Monsanto, BASF, Daimler, Aldi, Krupp, Rheinmetall, the Deutsche Bank.

All but The Left, that is, with no such ties and alone in opposing a dangerous course which, despite good business with both, moves ever more belligerently towards confrontation with Russia, China or both. A few voices in the SPD have called for the removal of American nuclear bombs from German soil or opposed armed drones, but they were not the voices of Olaf Scholz or Foreign Minister Heiko Maas. As for the Green leaders, they are loudest in demanding that Germany “stand up” to Russia! In the Bundestag the Left has been alone.

Why did the Left lose?

Why, oh why has the Left lost so severely, reducing its solo voice to an even smaller whisper?

One reason, doubtless, was a red-baiting campaign by the Union’s Armin Laschet. In the last weeks of the campaign, desperate to regain party strength, he warned dramatically of a threatening SPD-Green-Left take-over which would plunge poor Germany into a Bolshevik hell like that still peddled daily as typical of the German Democratic Republic. But that was neither new nor successful. The pressures of the Corona virus also played a part, limiting efforts of smaller parties to reach voters.

Far more injurious were the endless quarrels among its leaders, gladly played up in the mass media, and often centering around the personality of Sahra Wagenknecht, the party’s finest orator and best known media figure but who, step by step, has broken with her former leading positions in the party. Whether this was based on personal animosities and jealousies, personal ambition, or genuine strategy differences, it boiled up during the campaign and did plenty of damage to the party’s image.

But for many on the left the main cause of defeat was the hope of some party leaders to join with the SPD and the Greens in a coalition government. For years this was only a tiny possibility, but when the Greens and the SPD gained so swiftly in the polls, it began to look as if they might look to the Left for the necessary delegate majority to harness up a troika team – and rule the German roost!

With this goal in sight, The Left electioneering turned more and more against the Christian Union and the  big-biz Free Democrats, while sparing the Greens and the SPD so as not to hurt their feelings, alluding only to mild differences which could surely be ironed out.

This, however, required a willingness to compromise on basic questions, while both SPD and Greens stuck to their guns – almost literally! Could The Left, if in the government, further oppose NATO and call for a wider and peaceful combination of European states – including Russia? Would it continue to reject deploying Bundeswehr troops to foreign conflicts or on foreign missions? If it did, it was insisted, they could be not be included in any governing coalition! Despite the agreed-upon Left party program this is where some of its candidates and leaders weakened: “We should not remain too hard-headed” – “We must distinguish between good missions and bad ones” – “We must weigh each mission individually.” Etc.

Those on the left in The Left said: “No means No! These are excuses, means of letting  the camel ‘put just one toe in the tent!’ To start with!” The Bundeswehr is a vital part of German expansion plans, a successor to German military aggression in Africa around 1900, in World War One and, above all, in World War Two. There can be no compromises on this issue; The Left should instead remain in opposition, save its political soul and forgo the pleasures and honors of a minor cabinet seat or two and a bit more respectability in western Germany, where – for transparent reasons – it is largely ostracized or ignored.

This policy of going easy on the SPD, the Greens and its own principles backfired disastrously. Voters who disliked or feared the post-Merkel Union did not so often vote for the far-right AfD (except in embittered Saxony and Thuringia) as for the SPD and the Greens, leaving the Left in the lurch – as a weak and hardly effective part of the Establishment. Its main candidate, Janine Wissler, did her best to counteract this trend but felt compelled to walk a narrow, rocky path in debates and interviews. And 600,000 former Left voters switched to the SPD!

On many economic issues and especially on war and peace the delegates of the Left fought valiantly in the Bundestag. But it was far too rarely visible in struggles in the streets, in the shops, fighting evictions or in other sectors of everyday life and struggle where people felt most affected. Their candidates were almost always intellectuals or, if from the working class, then from its white or pink collar sectors. Few even hard-hit voters connected the Left with their personal problems.

Some Exceptions – in Bremen, Leipzig and Berlin

There were exceptions. In Bremen the active Left was strong enough to get into the city-state government – and keep fighting! The Left delegate in Leipzig who saved the party from near oblivion, the teacher Sören Pellman, frequently went to market-places or wherever people gathered, spoke with them, tried to help them whenever he could, a conduct he recommended for others. He received an amazing 22.8% of the vote, far more than any other – or his own party!

A big example of successful contact with the people was in Berlin, where an active non-party group fought to get their initiative on the ballot: “Confiscate Deutsche Wohnen” – the company owning  110,000 apartments in the city and constantly forcing long-time tenants out so as to gentrify the buildings, causing an acute shortage of affordable apartments. The real estate giants would be recompensed at market rates for such confiscation, but the tenants, with city ownership, would be saved from any more rent increases and from evictions.

Happily, the Left supported the group; within a few months it helped in getting 350,000 signatures to put it as an “initiative” on the ballot. The Greens also supported it – but only in a luke-warm limited way. The SPD opposed it; it has too many ties to the real estate biggies who, greatly frightened of this new movement, threw everything they could muster against it – but lost. In a glorious victory – a lone bright spot in the election – the initiative received a fantastic 59% of the votes.

It must now be debated and ruled upon in the newly elected city-state legislature. Despite its betrayal, the SPD won the city-state election; its popular candidate will soon be the capital city’s first female mayor, who also opposes confiscation. Perhaps, if Die LINKE had pushed this issue more visibly, and on a national level, it might have had better results. But the issue is still very hot and can become  contagious – a good contagion  for a change!

The big questions are now: can the Left become a street and shop level fighter in coming struggles? Can it maintain its positions against armaments and military interference around the globe? Can it hold onto and spread its convictions that the billionaires and their monopolies are the biggest menaces to German democracy, to the environment and to peace? Can it mobilize a vigorous, rousing  movement, involving people of Turkish, Kurdish and other national backgrounds,  but especially all the underprivileged and most heavily exploited? Those are no easy tasks, but indicate, I believe, the direction the Left must take if it wishes to play a renewed, growing and vitally necessary role in adding strong stones while developing the world’s rapidly changing architecture.

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Note on a neighbor

It may interest some readers that in a recent election in Graz, Austria’s second largest city, the Communist Party won the most votes (28,8 %) and will be the strongest party in the city council, a pay-off for years of attention to the problems and needs of working class tenants.