[lbo-talk] PRESS REVIEW: ALARM BELLS RING OVER SUPPORT FOR FAR RIGHT

Michael Givel mgivel at earthlink.net
Thu Sep 21 06:27:16 PDT 2006


PRESS REVIEW: ALARM BELLS RING OVER SUPPORT FOR FAR RIGHT(Germany) The National Democratic Party is now represented in four state legislatures

18/09/2006 - After the far-right National Democratic Party took 7.3 percent of the vote in Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania, the German press started ringing alarm bells. On Sunday, the far-right nationalist party gained 7.3 percent of the vote in the economically depressed northeastern state of Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania. The returns represented a significant increase compared to the state's previous election, in which they received less than one percent of the votes. The gains also mean that the NPD, which caters to the frustrations and anti-foreigner sentiments of the unemployed in Germany's poorest state, now is represented in four German state legislatures. For the German press, the far-right victory is cause for sounding the alarm bells.

Easterners unimpressed by democracy "In the interests of democracy, one should not underestimate the success of the NPD. What is nightmarish is the finding that half of the voters in the eastern part of Germany are unimpressed by democratic principles and freedoms that are valued in the West," proclaimed the Westdeutsche Allgemeine Zeitung, based in the industrial Ruhr Valley.

NPD party is reminiscent of the Nazis The liberal Süddeutsche Zeitung likened the NPD to Adolf Hitler's National Socialists and warned that the neo-Nazi party is a greater threat than other far right parties in Europe, because "Germany is in the situation of a dry alcoholic, who is experiencing a relapse, which makes it problematic to wait until they simply self-destruct out of their own stupidity." The Munich-based daily added that the NPD party is young, well-organized and maintains the façade of respectability by championing small causes, such as the protest against rising utility costs.

NPD addresses everyday concerns of voters Another national newspaper, the Frankfurter Rundschau proclaimed, "Faced with this election result, we must be particularly concerned about the fact that over the last few years the NPD has managed to penetrate society, in particular in eastern Germany. (They) organize children's fetes, youth concerts, and distribute CDs outside schools." According to Berlin's Tagesspiegel, "The NPD has achieved its goal, side by side with the Left Party and the Social Democrats, to establish themselves as a party for the small everyday man." It added that NPD voters can no longer be dismissed as misguided, but essentially decent people after the "atmosphere of violence and intimidation" surrounding the party's election campaign in Berlin. But the newspaper made no excuses for such voters. "They know what they are doing."

© Deutsche Welle http://www.dw?world.de/dw/0,1595,266,00.html ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ GERMANY STRUGGLES TO EXPLAIN FAR-RIGHT ELECTION SUCCESS Politicians are scrambling to clarify why the far-right NPD won seats in Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania's state assembly last weekend. But explanations should be replaced by long-term deliberation, say analysts.

19/09/2006 - The debate about right-wing extremism in eastern Germany has been reignited following the success of the far-right National Democratic Party (NPD) in Sunday's elections in Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania. The NPD won 7.3 percent of the vote, giving it six of the 71 seats in the eastern German state's legislature. Gideon Botsch from the Moses Mendelssohn Center for European-Jewish Studies at the University of Potsdam said the election results were to be expected. "We had feared it would happen, so we weren't surprised," said Botsch, an expert on right-wing extremism.

The "nice Nazi from next door" According to Botsch, the results were in part due to the party's strategy. For one, the NPD had the help of neo-Nazi comradeships. "The NPD is allied with these groups, who, for example, systematically apply intimidation tactics at events of the major democratic parties," Botsch said. In addition, the NPD took on a very civic appearance. "It's the idea of the nice Nazi from next door," said Toralf Staud, author of the book "Modern Nazis" and a writer on right-wing extremism since 1998. These neo-Nazis have become an integral part of civil society across wide areas in eastern Germany. In small towns and villages, right-wing extremists have for the large part taken over civic programs for children and youth, for example. "They are in parents' associations in schools and kindergartens or in sports clubs and use their position there to relay their ideas to the people," Botsch said. There, where the state and its educational facilities are increasingly retreating, where sociopolitical groups such as religious communities are closing down their institutions, neo-Nazis are investing in youth work -- and infiltrating a generation with their ideology.

German democracy neglects society's perimeter The election results were also the result of Germany's democratic parties' policies, which increasingly neglect certain areas of society, Botsch said. According to the latest data report by the Federal Statistics Office, only 38 percent of eastern Germans consider democracy to be the best form of government for Germany. In western Germany, it was 71 percent. "There are regions in which democratic structures no longer exist," Botsch said. There are no schools, no doctors and no churches. "The people are frustrated and ask themselves, what alternative do we have? The NPD then channels this frustration."

Canvassing made a difference According to the NPD, it invested 400,000 euros ($508,000) in its election campaign. The NPD in Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania got help from Saxony's parliamentary group leader Holger Apfel, an experienced campaigner. Professional "comrades" helped with organization and public relations work. "This was the most professional election campaign I have ever seen," Staud said. The party had managed to canvas throughout the state, too. "I saw towns where only NPD posters were hanging," Staud said. "The other parties didn't even go there." Flyers were written in a highly professional manner and in a way that was especially attractive to young people. "The language was snappy and cheeky." "The major parties don't go into small towns for the few votes there. The NPD does and it adds up," Botsch said. "The NPD was present, and not just with posters, but with concrete people."

Long standing discussions necessary The Central Council for Jews in Germany called the election outcome "alarming" and accused German politicians of failing to adequately combat the far-right. "The results of the election are dismaying and a sign of political bankruptcy," the council's president, Charlotte Knobloch, said in a statement. Politicians faced the same situation two years ago, after the right-wing NPD won seats in Saxony's legislature. For a short period, politicians were outspoken in addressing the problem. But the debate quickly died off. "In Germany, people either talk about right-wing extremism hysterically or not at all," author Staud said. He said the current debate would also soon wane. "This will have disastrous implications in the long-term," Staud said. "We are lacking a calm, factual and consistent discussion on this issue."

Should the NPD be banned? The election results have also reignited a discussion on whether the NPD should be banned. In March 2003, an attempt to prohibit the party failed when the Constitutional Court ruled that the federal government's use of informants within the NPD was illegal. Cornelius Weiss, head of the SPD parliamentary group in Saxony's state legislature, said a ban was not the answer. The best way to deal with the NPD representatives was to arm oneself with knowledge in order to have the right answer for any provocation. "I fear that the party would disappear into the underground relatively quickly," Weiss told the Cologne daily Kölner Stadt-Anzeiger. "It's better to argue with these people in an open battle." Saxony's premier, Georg Milbradt, said bans could not be the preferred form of societal debate. "This would not put an end to right-wing extremism," Milbradt told the newspaper Berliner Zeitung. "It would just take on a different organizational form." Botsch said that the NPD strategy runs under the slogan: Fight on the streets, fight for minds and fight in parliament. In eastern Germany, this strategy has borne fruit.

© Deutsche Welle http://www.dw?world.de/dw/0,1595,266,00.html



More information about the lbo-talk mailing list