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Labour and Social Justice – The Electoral Alternative

Labour and Social Justice – The Electoral Alternative (German: Arbeit und soziale Gerechtigkeit – Die Wahlalternative, WASG) was a left-wing German political party founded in 2005 by activists disenchanted with the ruling Red-Green coalition government. On 16 June 2007, WASG merged with Party of Democratic Socialism (PDS) to form The Left (Die Linke). At the time of its merger with The Left Party. PDS, WASG party membership stood at about 11,600 members.[citation needed]

Labour and Social Justice – The Electoral Alternative
Arbeit und soziale Gerechtigkeit – Die Wahlalternative
LeaderKlaus Ernst, Thomas Händel, Christine Buchholz, Axel Troost
Founded22 January 2005 (2005-01-22)
Dissolved16 June 2007 (2007-06-16)
Split fromSocial Democratic Party of Germany
Merged intoThe Left
HeadquartersKönigswarter Straße 16
D-90762 Fürth
IdeologyDemocratic socialism
Trade unionism[1]
Political positionLeft-wing
ColoursOrange
Website
www.w-asg.de

The party ran for the first time in the 2005 state election of North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany's most populous state and a stronghold of the governing Social Democratic Party of Germany (SPD), with pastor Jürgen Klute as its front-runner. The party campaigned against what it considered "the neoliberal consensus" displayed by the governing centre-left political parties and the centre-right opposition alike. Some of its main issues were opposition to cuts in provision of social benefits and to the favourable taxation of the wealthy. In the first few months of existence, it received a large amount of news coverage, and had its first national convention from 6 May until 8 May 2005.

Oskar Lafontaine, a former major figure on the left wing of the SPD, joined the new party officially on 18 June 2005, and became their North Rhine-Westphalia frontrunner for the general election on 18 September 2005. As the necessary steps for a merger with the PDS could not be taken fast enough, he advocated an electoral alliance with WASG members on the PDS's list, to which the WASG and PDS leaderships in principle agreed on 10 June 2005. The title of this list was The Left Party.PDS, which to this end - as a matter of formality - was adopted by the PDS as its new name, because changing a name was comparatively easy.

The anticipated fusion was later made official, with the WASG and The Left Party. PDS merging on 16 June 2007 to a party called simply The Left (Die Linke) or also, colloquially, "the Left Party" (without ".PDS").

Programmatic orientation edit

The draft programmatic orientation was strongly influenced by the memorandums of the Working group for Alternative Economical Politics which counted one of the party's leading figures, economist Axel Troost, among its members. The programme pleaded for a policy that strengthens domestic demand and centres around social justice; part of the programme is the return to a more progressive taxation. First and foremost, the tax breaks for large corporations and high incomes introduced by the SPD-Green coalition federal government starting from 1999 would have to be abolished and the federal tax on assets, which had ceased in 1997, reintroduced. The draft programme would have to be discussed until the spring 2005.

Historical accounts edit

Pre-history/Association WASG edit

The party emerged from the association "Wahlalternative Arbeit und soziale Gerechtigkeit e. V." which had been founded on 3 July 2004. The association itself had started as the merger of the groups Initiative Arbeit und soziale Gerechtigkeit (mainly by Bavarian union representatives) and the Wahlalternative ("Electoral Alternative", founded by people in Northern and Western Germany). Both groups had been founded in reaction to the government politics as laid down in the Agenda 2010 programme of the governing "Red-Green" coalition, which they consider as too neoliberal. The first meeting of the Wahlalternative took place on 5 March 2004 in the Berlin headquarters of the Confederation of German Trade Unions (DGB).

The association had 4,056 members on 11 September 2004,[citation needed] the number rising to over 6,000 members shortly before Christmas 2004.[citation needed] The first organisation in one of the states was founded on 17 July 2004 in the Saarland; the first convention in North Rhine-Westphalia took place on 17 October 2004, and it was decided to take part in the 2005 regional elections in that state in spite of the party's unclear financial situation.

The association WAsG e. V., the party's "birthplace", continued to exist along with the party; its future purpose had still not been determined. It may be transferred into a political foundation similar to the ones kept by other German political parties.

News coverage edit

The nascent party drew attention in the mass media because the foundation of a new left-wing party might have led to a schism in the SPD. Forerunners to such a development were the secession of the Independent Social Democratic Party of Germany (USPD) during World War I, the foundation of the Greens (although these were not founded by disaffected SPD members) in the late 1970s, and the Democratic Socialists (DS) party founded by Karl-Heinz Hansen and Manfred Coppik in the early 1980s.

Foundation edit

The federal assembly in Nuremberg of the association WAsG e. V. (20 and 21 November 2004) decided to found a party, something that had never been ruled out as a possible outcome by members of the provisional leadership. After the strike vote among members in December 2004, the party was officially founded on 22 January 2005 in Göttingen. The party's name came into being as Arbeit und soziale Gerechtigkeit – Die Wahlalternative (the abbreviation ASG later had to be changed to WASG, due to a lawsuit).

Internal conflicts edit

There was a lot of controversy about the new party's political orientation among its members. While some liked to establish it as a purely leftist party of socialist inclination, many others, especially union representatives and former SPD members, aimed to provide a home also for social conservatives and religious people who believe in a strong welfare state. The argument escalated in February 2005 (shortly after the party's foundation) but was soothed through a compromise that was satisfactory for everyone. The compromise calls for a strict accord with welfare state orientation without excluding more socialist-minded members from the party.

Regional election in North Rhine-Westphalia edit

The party decided to take part in the regional election in North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany's most populous state, on 22 May 2005. Eligibility was ensured in all regional counties, and pastor Jürgen Klute of Herne was the leading candidate of a 40-person-ticket.

In this regional election the WASG reached 2.2% of the votes cast (approximately 182,000 votes).

Lawsuit against the abbreviation ASG edit

According to a decision made by the District Court of Düsseldorf, the party was no longer allowed to officially use its abbreviation "ASG". The party had been sued by the Arbeitsgemeinschaft Sozialpädagogik und Gesellschaftsbild (ASG). As a result the abbreviation WASG" has been unofficially adopted – with an equally unofficial slight reordering of the words in its name to fit the new abbreviation.

Electoral alliance with the PDS edit

 
Federal elections results

After the crushing defeat of his SPD in the state elections in North Rhine-Westphalia, Federal Chancellor Schröder declared the intention of going for a general election as soon as possible, avoiding the completion of the regular term – which was to run until September 2006 – by the device of failing a Motion of Confidence vote, which took place on 1 July 2005. However, there were major constitutional issues which were to be settled by the Federal Constitutional Court of Germany. According to the Basic Law for the Federal Republic of Germany, which incorporates lessons learned from the failed Weimar Republic, the Bundestag cannot dissolve itself or be dissolved by a political representative ahead of schedule, except under very rare circumstances.

While the WASG hoped to gain a large enough membership and to raise enough money for an election campaign by the originally scheduled election date (some time in September 2006), it now faced the difficulty of an early election one year ahead of schedule – occurring on the date of 18 September 2005. Polls predicted an election result of at most 3% for the new party, well below the electoral threshold of 5%. In that situation, the idea of an electoral coalition with the ideologically similar Party of Democratic Socialism (PDS), led by Gregor Gysi, was put forward by Oskar Lafontaine.

On 10 June 2005, the leaderships of WASG and the PDS agreed to form an electoral alliance for the then-upcoming federal elections in September 2005. According to the agreement, the parties would not compete against one another in any district, and followed a joint electoral manifesto. This was intended to benefit both parties, because the WASG was based primarily in western Germany, while the PDS, which was the legal successor to the East German Socialist Unity Party (SED), was strongest in the East. Lafontaine, the former chairman of the SPD, was the WASG's lead candidate.

After a multitude of initial problems due to the somewhat restrictive German electoral law, the PDS re-christened itself as Die Linkspartei (The Left Party) and appeared on the ballot as either Die Linkspartei.PDS – in the Eastern states – or Die Linkspartei. – in the Western states – in line with the WASG's wishes. WASG candidates appeared on those electoral lists.

As of 5 July 2005, the coalition was at 30% in the polls in the East (level with the CDU there), and 11% nationally.[2] In the Federal Election the Left Party gained 8.7% of the votes and 54 Members of the Bundestag, including 12 of the WASG.

In March 2006, however, divisions emerged between the WASG and the PDS – now The Left Party.PDS – in Berlin and the East more generally, in the run-up to state elections, due to the continuing involvement of the PDS with the SPD in coalition governments which were instituting cut-backs. The WASG Berlin, against advice or pressure from the national party leadership, announced its intention to run separate lists in Berlin against the PDS. The WASG list won 2.9% of the vote in the 17 September elections. The fusion process brought a significant loss in party memberships of WASG.

Elections edit

Federal Parliament (Bundestag) edit

Election year # of constituency
votes
# of party list
votes
% of party list
vote
# of overall seats won +/− Notes
1990 1,049,245 1,129,578 2.4 (#5)
17 / 614
  17
1994 1,920,420 2,066,176 4.4 (#5)
30 / 622
  13
1998 2,416,781 2,515,454 5.1 (#5)
36 / 631
  6
2002 2,079,203 1,916,702 4.0 (#5)
2 / 603
  34
2005[a] 3,764,168 4,118,194 8.7 (#4)
54 / 614
[b]
  52
  • a As WASG and PDS
  • b 24 - WASG; 30 - PDS

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Butzlaff, Felix; Harm, Stine; Walter, Franz (2009). Patt oder Gezeitenwechsel?. Springer-Verlag. p. 73. ISBN 9783531162034.
  2. ^ Neuwahlen: Linksbündnis im Osten gleichauf mit CDU - SPIEGEL ONLINE - Nachrichten - Politik

External links edit

  • Homepage of the WASG, in German
  • Homepage of the Left parliamentary party, including MPs from Linkspartei.PDS and WASG, in German
  • Working group for Alternative Economical Politics (Memorandum-Gruppe), in German 2021-06-30 at the Wayback Machine
  • Homepage of the front-runner for the German regional election in North Rhine-Westphalia in May 2005, pastor Jürgen Klute, in German

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You can help expand this article with text translated from the corresponding article in German August 2019 Click show for important translation instructions View a machine translated version of the German article Machine translation like DeepL or Google Translate is a useful starting point for translations but translators must revise errors as necessary and confirm that the translation is accurate rather than simply copy pasting machine translated text into the English Wikipedia Consider adding a topic to this template there are already 9 058 articles in the main category and specifying topic will aid in categorization Do not translate text that appears unreliable or low quality If possible verify the text with references provided in the foreign language article You must provide copyright attribution in the edit summary accompanying your translation by providing an interlanguage link to the source of your translation A model attribution edit summary is Content in this edit is translated from the existing German Wikipedia article at de Arbeit amp soziale Gerechtigkeit Die Wahlalternative see its history for attribution You should also add the template Translated de Arbeit amp soziale Gerechtigkeit Die Wahlalternative to the talk page For more guidance see Wikipedia Translation This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Labour and Social Justice The Electoral Alternative news newspapers books scholar JSTOR October 2008 Learn how and when to remove this template message Labour and Social Justice The Electoral Alternative German Arbeit und soziale Gerechtigkeit Die Wahlalternative WASG was a left wing German political party founded in 2005 by activists disenchanted with the ruling Red Green coalition government On 16 June 2007 WASG merged with Party of Democratic Socialism PDS to form The Left Die Linke At the time of its merger with The Left Party PDS WASG party membership stood at about 11 600 members citation needed Labour and Social Justice The Electoral Alternative Arbeit und soziale Gerechtigkeit Die WahlalternativeLeaderKlaus Ernst Thomas Handel Christine Buchholz Axel TroostFounded22 January 2005 2005 01 22 Dissolved16 June 2007 2007 06 16 Split fromSocial Democratic Party of GermanyMerged intoThe LeftHeadquartersKonigswarter Strasse 16D 90762 FurthIdeologyDemocratic socialismTrade unionism 1 Political positionLeft wingColoursOrangeWebsitewww w asg dePolitics of GermanyPolitical partiesElectionsThe party ran for the first time in the 2005 state election of North Rhine Westphalia Germany s most populous state and a stronghold of the governing Social Democratic Party of Germany SPD with pastor Jurgen Klute as its front runner The party campaigned against what it considered the neoliberal consensus displayed by the governing centre left political parties and the centre right opposition alike Some of its main issues were opposition to cuts in provision of social benefits and to the favourable taxation of the wealthy In the first few months of existence it received a large amount of news coverage and had its first national convention from 6 May until 8 May 2005 Oskar Lafontaine a former major figure on the left wing of the SPD joined the new party officially on 18 June 2005 and became their North Rhine Westphalia frontrunner for the general election on 18 September 2005 As the necessary steps for a merger with the PDS could not be taken fast enough he advocated an electoral alliance with WASG members on the PDS s list to which the WASG and PDS leaderships in principle agreed on 10 June 2005 The title of this list was The Left Party PDS which to this end as a matter of formality was adopted by the PDS as its new name because changing a name was comparatively easy The anticipated fusion was later made official with the WASG and The Left Party PDS merging on 16 June 2007 to a party called simply The Left Die Linke or also colloquially the Left Party without PDS Contents 1 Programmatic orientation 2 Historical accounts 2 1 Pre history Association WASG 2 2 News coverage 2 3 Foundation 2 4 Internal conflicts 2 5 Regional election in North Rhine Westphalia 2 6 Lawsuit against the abbreviation ASG 2 7 Electoral alliance with the PDS 3 Elections 3 1 Federal Parliament Bundestag 4 See also 5 References 6 External linksProgrammatic orientation editThe draft programmatic orientation was strongly influenced by the memorandums of the Working group for Alternative Economical Politics which counted one of the party s leading figures economist Axel Troost among its members The programme pleaded for a policy that strengthens domestic demand and centres around social justice part of the programme is the return to a more progressive taxation First and foremost the tax breaks for large corporations and high incomes introduced by the SPD Green coalition federal government starting from 1999 would have to be abolished and the federal tax on assets which had ceased in 1997 reintroduced The draft programme would have to be discussed until the spring 2005 Historical accounts editPre history Association WASG edit The party emerged from the association Wahlalternative Arbeit und soziale Gerechtigkeit e V which had been founded on 3 July 2004 The association itself had started as the merger of the groups Initiative Arbeit und soziale Gerechtigkeit mainly by Bavarian union representatives and the Wahlalternative Electoral Alternative founded by people in Northern and Western Germany Both groups had been founded in reaction to the government politics as laid down in the Agenda 2010 programme of the governing Red Green coalition which they consider as too neoliberal The first meeting of the Wahlalternative took place on 5 March 2004 in the Berlin headquarters of the Confederation of German Trade Unions DGB The association had 4 056 members on 11 September 2004 citation needed the number rising to over 6 000 members shortly before Christmas 2004 citation needed The first organisation in one of the states was founded on 17 July 2004 in the Saarland the first convention in North Rhine Westphalia took place on 17 October 2004 and it was decided to take part in the 2005 regional elections in that state in spite of the party s unclear financial situation The association WAsG e V the party s birthplace continued to exist along with the party its future purpose had still not been determined It may be transferred into a political foundation similar to the ones kept by other German political parties News coverage edit The nascent party drew attention in the mass media because the foundation of a new left wing party might have led to a schism in the SPD Forerunners to such a development were the secession of the Independent Social Democratic Party of Germany USPD during World War I the foundation of the Greens although these were not founded by disaffected SPD members in the late 1970s and the Democratic Socialists DS party founded by Karl Heinz Hansen and Manfred Coppik in the early 1980s Foundation edit The federal assembly in Nuremberg of the association WAsG e V 20 and 21 November 2004 decided to found a party something that had never been ruled out as a possible outcome by members of the provisional leadership After the strike vote among members in December 2004 the party was officially founded on 22 January 2005 in Gottingen The party s name came into being as Arbeit und soziale Gerechtigkeit Die Wahlalternative the abbreviation ASG later had to be changed to WASG due to a lawsuit Internal conflicts edit There was a lot of controversy about the new party s political orientation among its members While some liked to establish it as a purely leftist party of socialist inclination many others especially union representatives and former SPD members aimed to provide a home also for social conservatives and religious people who believe in a strong welfare state The argument escalated in February 2005 shortly after the party s foundation but was soothed through a compromise that was satisfactory for everyone The compromise calls for a strict accord with welfare state orientation without excluding more socialist minded members from the party Regional election in North Rhine Westphalia edit The party decided to take part in the regional election in North Rhine Westphalia Germany s most populous state on 22 May 2005 Eligibility was ensured in all regional counties and pastor Jurgen Klute of Herne was the leading candidate of a 40 person ticket In this regional election the WASG reached 2 2 of the votes cast approximately 182 000 votes Lawsuit against the abbreviation ASG edit According to a decision made by the District Court of Dusseldorf the party was no longer allowed to officially use its abbreviation ASG The party had been sued by the Arbeitsgemeinschaft Sozialpadagogik und Gesellschaftsbild ASG As a result the abbreviation WASG has been unofficially adopted with an equally unofficial slight reordering of the words in its name to fit the new abbreviation Electoral alliance with the PDS edit nbsp Federal elections resultsAfter the crushing defeat of his SPD in the state elections in North Rhine Westphalia Federal Chancellor Schroder declared the intention of going for a general election as soon as possible avoiding the completion of the regular term which was to run until September 2006 by the device of failing a Motion of Confidence vote which took place on 1 July 2005 However there were major constitutional issues which were to be settled by the Federal Constitutional Court of Germany According to the Basic Law for the Federal Republic of Germany which incorporates lessons learned from the failed Weimar Republic the Bundestag cannot dissolve itself or be dissolved by a political representative ahead of schedule except under very rare circumstances While the WASG hoped to gain a large enough membership and to raise enough money for an election campaign by the originally scheduled election date some time in September 2006 it now faced the difficulty of an early election one year ahead of schedule occurring on the date of 18 September 2005 Polls predicted an election result of at most 3 for the new party well below the electoral threshold of 5 In that situation the idea of an electoral coalition with the ideologically similar Party of Democratic Socialism PDS led by Gregor Gysi was put forward by Oskar Lafontaine On 10 June 2005 the leaderships of WASG and the PDS agreed to form an electoral alliance for the then upcoming federal elections in September 2005 According to the agreement the parties would not compete against one another in any district and followed a joint electoral manifesto This was intended to benefit both parties because the WASG was based primarily in western Germany while the PDS which was the legal successor to the East German Socialist Unity Party SED was strongest in the East Lafontaine the former chairman of the SPD was the WASG s lead candidate After a multitude of initial problems due to the somewhat restrictive German electoral law the PDS re christened itself as Die Linkspartei The Left Party and appeared on the ballot as either Die Linkspartei PDS in the Eastern states or Die Linkspartei in the Western states in line with the WASG s wishes WASG candidates appeared on those electoral lists As of 5 July 2005 the coalition was at 30 in the polls in the East level with the CDU there and 11 nationally 2 In the Federal Election the Left Party gained 8 7 of the votes and 54 Members of the Bundestag including 12 of the WASG In March 2006 however divisions emerged between the WASG and the PDS now The Left Party PDS in Berlin and the East more generally in the run up to state elections due to the continuing involvement of the PDS with the SPD in coalition governments which were instituting cut backs The WASG Berlin against advice or pressure from the national party leadership announced its intention to run separate lists in Berlin against the PDS The WASG list won 2 9 of the vote in the 17 September elections The fusion process brought a significant loss in party memberships of WASG Elections editFederal Parliament Bundestag edit Election year of constituencyvotes of party listvotes of party listvote of overall seats won Notes1990 1 049 245 1 129 578 2 4 5 17 614 nbsp 171994 1 920 420 2 066 176 4 4 5 30 622 nbsp 131998 2 416 781 2 515 454 5 1 5 36 631 nbsp 62002 2 079 203 1 916 702 4 0 5 2 603 nbsp 342005 a 3 764 168 4 118 194 8 7 4 54 614 b nbsp 52a As WASG and PDS b 24 WASG 30 PDSSee also editPolitics of GermanyReferences edit Butzlaff Felix Harm Stine Walter Franz 2009 Patt oder Gezeitenwechsel Springer Verlag p 73 ISBN 9783531162034 Neuwahlen Linksbundnis im Osten gleichauf mit CDU SPIEGEL ONLINE Nachrichten PolitikExternal links editHomepage of the WASG in German Homepage from the beginnings as registered association WASG e V in German Homepage of the Left parliamentary party including MPs from Linkspartei PDS and WASG in German Working group for Alternative Economical Politics Memorandum Gruppe in German Archived 2021 06 30 at the Wayback Machine Homepage of the WASG in North Rhine Westphalia in German Homepage of the front runner for the German regional election in North Rhine Westphalia in May 2005 pastor Jurgen Klute in German Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Labour and Social Justice The Electoral Alternative amp oldid 1195116783, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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