The German establishment is desperately clinging to power in defiance of democracy
By: Rachel Marsden
Like in France, there is an open and crude effort to deny voters their democratic choice
At least have enough class to wait more than five seconds after the election
you just lost before doing democracy dirty.
The results were still firming up amid exit poll results in eastern Germany's
state elections when the second-place party in Thuringia took to social media to
tell voters what’s what.
“The first projection confirms the forecast – the CDU is gaining ground and will
definitely finish second! Red-Red-Green is voted out! We thank all voters,
helpers and supporters in the country and from all over Germany! We will seek
talks to explore the possibilities of forming a government. The following still
applies: There will be no cooperation with the AfD,” wrote a seemingly
over-caffeinated teenager running the account of the right-wing establishment
party still mostly known for its former leader, ex-Chancellor Angela Merkel.
Easy there, sports. Nothing quite screams “respect for democracy” like loading
your post up with emojis and telling voters that although you’re pleased that
they reduced your establishment left opponents (and Chancellor Olaf Scholz’s
national governing socialist/green “stoplight coalition”) to a rump of 6.5%,
you’ll nonetheless still have to do something about the fact that voters
relegated you to second place (at 24%) behind the populist, anti-establishment
right-wing Alternative for Germany (AfD) with 33%. And that “something” involves
finding a way to keep the election’s actual winners away from the steering
wheel. How? By making shady back-room deals with some of the other losers.
Omid Nouripour, a leader of Scholz’s federal coalition partner, the Greens, told
the Associated Press that “an openly right-wing extremist party has become the
strongest force in a state parliament for the first time since 1949, and that
causes many people very deep concern and fear.” People can’t be that scared if
they literally just voted for them, huh?
“The results for the AfD in Saxony and Thuringia are worrying,” Scholz told
Reuters. “The AfD is damaging Germany. It is weakening the economy, dividing
society and ruining our country’s reputation.” This guy’s projection is more
powerful than an IMAX cinema. Replace “Germany” or “the country” with “me” and
it makes a lot more sense.
The idea of electoral losers adamantly working to deny voters their democratic
choice seems to be a new trend in Europe as the populist right- and left-wing
parties start racking up electoral wins.
Here in France, for example, French President Emmanuel Macron pitched a fit
after his party lost the European parliamentary elections to Marine Le Pen’s
anti-establishment right National Rally. So he called a totally unnecessary
legislative election slated right before the Paris Summer Olympic Games. Because
who wouldn’t want to appease their ego before heading into a major international
event. Tough to enjoy it otherwise. In an attempt to block the National Rally,
Team Macron did something right out in the open that would have been
impeachment-worthy if it had been done behind closed doors: they arranged with
the anti-establishment left New Popular Front (NPF) coalition to strategically
withdraw candidates to focus on a single one between them in districts where the
right-wing looked likely to win a seat otherwise. Way to deny voters a
legitimate democratic choice.
The plan worked so well that the National Rally won the popular vote but was
denied the chance of governing because it was the left-wing NPF that won the
most seats.
And despite Team Macron engineering that outcome, he’s now refusing to approve
the prime ministerial choice of the coalition with the most seats – something
that former Presidents from Jacques Chirac to Francois Mitterrand had no problem
doing. Probably because it didn’t occur to them to spend weeks using the events
calendar – Macron cited the Olympics and spend his summer jacking around on the
water with his pals – to drag their feet in doing anything other than what
convention dictates.
Sure, “cohabitation” of a president with a prime minister from a party that
isn’t his is annoying, but you’re supposed to put on your big boy pants and deal
with it, not pretend that it’s some kind of college dorm assignment that you can
wriggle out of. Which is what Macron is now doing, citing the need for
“institutional stability” in trying to justify his refusal to appoint a
left-wing prime minister – even one with an elite institutional senior civil
servant background – for fear that the new prime minister would appoint a
left-wing government that would implement a left-wing program. You know, the
same one that your team deliberately decided to manipulate voters into choosing
because you didn’t like the right-wing program, either.
Macron has been dragging his feet so long that the left has taken up an
impeachment process against him, whose chances of actually succeeding with the
required two-thirds support of both the National Assembly and the Senate
increase every day that he fails to find a solution to his conundrum that
doesn’t flagrantly fly in the face of electoral will – which could best be
described as a routing of the establishment. The same establishment from which
Macron would really love to handpick a puppet to carry out an agenda that voters
roundly rejected.
The German establishment is sounding at a lot like the French one right now in
the wake of these state elections in Thuringia and Saxony. Over in Saxony, the
CDU barely squeaked out a win against the AfD, with results currently showing
them both at 31%. There, again, the governing establishment Social Democrats
were clobbered, coming in at just 7.5% support. The anti-establishment left
split the vote between Bundestag parliamentarian Sahra Wagenknecht’s brand new
BSW coalition (15.6% in Thuringia and 11.5% in Saxony) and Die Linkie, whose
collective success suggests that the vote was more about a rejection of the
establishment on all sides and only secondarily a right/left ideological one –
just like in France.
There really wasn’t a ton of daylight between the anti-establishment right
and left during the campaigns. Both called on the federal government to stop
fueling the conflict in Ukraine with German weapons, and demanded security for
German economic sovereignty, which has taken a wrong turn somewhere when you
have German industry bailing out to the US because it can’t survive on the short
cold showers that the German finance minister brags about taking himself.
Another big issue that’s come up in this election campaign was the German
establishment agreeing to have American long-range weapons move into Germany for
the first time since the end of the Cold War. And this is the Eastern part of
the country closest to Russia, which risks being directly impacted by those
hosting plans to have the US, which already, with NATO, has bases all over
Germany, move into yet another room and bring its weapons stash with it starting
in 2026.
It doesn’t exactly scream independence when you’re trying to go about your
business as a supposedly sovereign country and Uncle Sam is crashing on the
couch with his cruise missiles. But hey, Chancellor Olaf Scholz zoned out and
stared into space when US President Joe Biden threatened to blow up Nord Stream
while standing right beside him, so chances were that he wasn’t going to exactly
say no to some armed squatters.
Apparently any excuse will do in an attempt to justify the inevitable
post-electoral coup by the ruling establishment elites, so they can keep
lecturing the rest of the world about democracy.
COPYRIGHT 2024 RACHEL MARSDEN