May 4, 2005

THE 30'S AGAIN:

Disappointed Eastern Germans Turn Right: Unemployment and slashed social programs boost support for extremist politicians, who are playing up a populist image. (Jeffrey Fleishman, May 4, 2005, LA Times)

Across the road from the shuttered sawmill, a man with a shaved head sat behind the counter of the Crime Store, a neo-Nazi boutique selling camouflage thong underwear and CDs with titles such as "It's Our Europe, Not Theirs" and "Rockin' the Reich Volume II."

Business, the man said, was good. In this hard-pressed eastern German town, prospects also are strong for the right-wing National Democratic Party, or NPD, which emerged decades ago from the ideological ruins of the Nazi regime. With many in this part of Saxony state feeling betrayed by the country's main political parties, the NPD nearly doubled its support in local elections last June, winning 21% of the vote in Koenigstein.

Much of the right wing's success is rooted in the failures of German reunification since the end of the Cold War. Beginning in the mid-1990s, the NPD targeted poor cities in the east, marketing its xenophobic rhetoric while trying to tame a radical fringe of skinheads. Although still yearning for an ethnically pure "fatherland," the party has become more populist, working on local problems such as schools and roads to help enhance its stature.

Few members are suggesting a renaissance of right-wing political enthusiasm, but high unemployment, trimmed social programs and a loss of pride among laid-off workers are strengthening support for extremist politicians. In September, the NPD won 9.2% of the vote in Saxony, giving it an unprecedented 12 seats in the state parliament. The party is not a factor in national politics, but its members are getting elected to town and regional councils. The NPD and other radical right-wing parties have 313 politicians serving in municipal governments across Germany.

Uwe Leichsenring embodies the NPD's shift in personality and tactics. The pudgy-cheeked owner of a driving school was once investigated by German intelligence for his association with the SSS, a banned radical group known for violence toward immigrants. Today, he is an NPD voice on the Koenigstein council and in the Saxon parliament, where he wears button-down shirts and speaks of the ills of globalization ...


The sooner Germans are in the minority the better.

Posted by Orrin Judd at May 4, 2005 8:22 AM
Comments

France will take care of them.

Posted by: at May 4, 2005 11:56 AM

Well, France would give the Germans a hobby and keep them (and the French) out of our hair for a little while.

Posted by: Mikey at May 4, 2005 12:02 PM

Complaints about globalization and demands for more social services and public works are a peculiar sort of right-wing platform.

Posted by: bart at May 4, 2005 1:44 PM

New slogan for Germany: "Subsidize Facism!"

Posted by: jim hamlen at May 4, 2005 2:55 PM

What does the European establishment expect to happen when the boundaries of political discourse are so limited? If you call everyone who criticizes immigration a Nazi, pretty soon people who are frustrated with immigration and can't find any mainstream politicians willing to take on the issue are going to support actual Nazis.

Posted by: b at May 4, 2005 3:12 PM

Bart: That's assuming that these guys are right wing. Authoritarians who want to control everything in their country down to the smallest detail of the economy are not necessarily left wing or right wing. The difference appears to be how they justify/market what they are doing.

The slogans may be different, but a tyrant is a tyrant is a tyrant.

Posted by: Mikey at May 4, 2005 3:16 PM

It's the article that calls them 'right-wing', not me. Their program is National Socialism, a left wing idea since it began in the late 19th century as Christian Socialism under Karl Lueger, the former mayor of Vienna.

Posted by: bart at May 5, 2005 11:13 AM
« LUCKY HE MARRIED WELL: | Main | IF YOU RAISE THEM THEY WON'T DRIVE: »