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BERLIN – German Chancellor Angela Merkel should be happy
nowadays: her party’s approval ratings aren’t bad, and her own are very
good. She no longer has serious rivals within the center-right Christian
Democratic Union (CDU), while the left opposition is fragmented into four
parties. Her response to the European crisis has prevailed – or at least
that is the impression that she conveys, and that most Germans believe. So
everything is fine and dandy, right?
Not so fast. Two issues could complicate Merkel’s re-election
bid in the autumn of 2013. Domestically, her coalition partner, the liberal
Free Democrats (FDP), is disintegrating. Even if the FDP survives the next
election (which is by no means certain), the current coalition is unlikely
to retain its parliamentary majority, leaving Merkel increasingly dependent
on the Social Democrats (SPD). While this need not matter to her too much
as long as she retains the chancellorship, in Sigmar Gabriel, the SPD’s
leader, she faces – for the first time – an opponent whom she would
underestimate at her peril.
But the real danger to Merkel is external: the European
crisis. If she is unlucky, the crisis will come to a head at the start of
the German election year, and all previous calculations could be moot,
because, despite Germans’ frustration with Europe, the electorate would
punish severely those who allowed Europe to fail.
The European Union’s economy is sliding into a severe and, in
all likelihood, long-lasting recession, largely self-inflicted. While
Germany is still trying to banish the specter of hyperinflation with strict
eurozone austerity measures, the EU crisis countries are facing a real
threat of deflation, with potentially disastrous consequences. It is only a
question of time – no longer very much time – before economic
destabilization gives rise to political instability.
Hungary, where democratic backsliding appears to be taking
hold, provides a foretaste of a Europe in which the eurozone crisis and
deflation persist. The mood in the Mediterranean EU members, as well as in
Ireland, is heating up, owing not only to the tightening squeeze of
austerity, but also – and perhaps more importantly – to the absence of
policies that offer people hope for a better future. The explosive nature
of current trends, which point to eventual re-nationalization of
sovereignty from the bottom up, is greatly underestimated in Berlin.
The crisis has now reached Italy and is threatening to spread
to France. With Mario Monti’s premiership, Italy has mobilized its best
people, and neither Italy nor Europe will get a better government for the
foreseeable future. If Monti’s administration is toppled – either in
parliament or in the streets – the EU’s fourth-largest economy could come
crashing down. Monti is urgently calling for help. Where is it?
Developments in France (the second-largest eurozone economy)
should also not be underestimated in this presidential election year. If a
majority of the French come to believe that a course of action is being
imposed on them from outside – and by Germany, no less! – they will respond
with traditional Gallic stubbornness.
What is at stake is less the election’s outcome than the
margin between President Nicolas Sarkozy and the far-right National Front
leader, Marine Le Pen – and whether she overtakes him to qualify for the
second-round run-off against the Socialist candidate. While she would be
unlikely to win the presidency, she could reshape and realign the French
right. For that reason, a Sarkozy debacle would drastically reduce his
Socialist successor’s room for maneuver on European policy, fundamentally
altering France’s position in Europe.
But, while the French election’s outcome will hinge to a
crucial extent on European crisis politics, Germany’s government acts as if
this were none of its concern. Instead, the main – almost exclusive – topic
in Berlin is the upcoming election. And the central question is not, “What
needs to be done now in the interest of Europe?” Rather, it is, “How much
can people in Germany be expected to accept – in particular, how much
honesty?”
No one will act in a way that jeopardizes their electoral
prospects, at least while there are still alternatives. So it is
conceivable that Germany is not at all interested in a serious effort to
resolve Europe’s crisis, because that would mean taking big risks and
investing a lot of money.
The CDU-FDP coalition prefers to sugarcoat the situation by
convincing themselves of an Anglo-Saxon conspiracy, abetted by those in the
European crisis countries unwilling to perform and reform and whose only
purpose is to make the Germans pay. So far, Merkel’s coalition is like
someone driving against traffic, dead certain that everyone else is going
the wrong way.
Europe’s disintegration has already advanced much further than
it might appear. Distrust and national egoism are spreading rapidly,
devouring European solidarity and common purpose.
Institutionally, Europe has been on the right track since the
last summit, but it threatens to disintegrate from the bottom up. To save
the euro – which is essential, because the European project’s fate depends
on the success of monetary union – Europe needs action now: in addition to
indispensable austerity measures and structural reforms, there is no way to
succeed without a viable economic program that will assure growth.
That won’t come cheap. If Merkel’s government believes that
paying lip service to growth is enough, it is playing with fire: a euro
collapse in which not only Germans would be badly burned.
Joschka Fischer, Germany’s foreign
minister and vice-chancellor from 1998 to 2005, was a leader in the German
Green Party for almost 20 years.
Copyright: Project Syndicate/Institute for
Human Sciences, 2011.
www.project-syndicate.org
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