Note :  The usual Leftist sentiments you would  expect of the NYT, but also 
a more-or-less
candid expression of "concern" about the potential for a  Rightist upsurge 
in Germany.
BR

 
 
 
 
 
 (http://www.nytimes.com/)   
 
(http://www.nytimes.com/2010/09/22/world/europe/22germany.html?_r=1&pagewanted=print#)
 




 
____________________________________
September 21, 2010

Right-Wing Sentiment, Ready to Burst  Its Dam
By _MICHAEL SLACKMAN_ 
(http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/people/s/michael_slackman/index.html?inline=nyt-per)
 
 
BERLIN — As anti-immigrant sentiment continues to _sweep across Europe_ 
(http://uk.reuters.com/article/idUKTRE68I2ER20100919) , generating a right-wing 
populist  wave from the shores of the Mediterranean to the chilly reaches 
of Scandinavia,  there is growing concern that such politics could take root 
here, too, in the  fertile ground of financial uncertainty, rising 
anti-Muslim sentiment and a  widening political vacuum left by the misfortunes 
of the 
once mighty Christian  Democratic Union.  
While the Swedes this week _elected_ 
(http://www.nytimes.com/2010/09/20/world/europe/20sweden.html)  an 
anti-immigrant party to Parliament for the  
first time, and the French are busy repatriating Roma, Germans continue to  
debate a best-selling book blaming Muslim immigrants for “dumbing down society”
  and have heard a prominent conservative ally of the chancellor, _Angela 
Merkel_ 
(http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/people/m/angela_merkel/index.html?inline=nyt-per)
 , suggest that _Poland helped to instigate 
World War II_ (http://www.dw-world.de/dw/article/0,,6013795,00.html) .  
“Uncertainty is widespread over German society,” said Gero Neugebauer, a  
political scientist at the Free University of Berlin. “That is always a good 
 base for those who tell the people all their problems can be solved by 
simple  methods, by solutions that the others wouldn’t dare to do, like throw 
out the  foreigners.”  
Since the end of World War II, German laws, political elites and social  
conventions have prevented right-wing parties from earning enough of a 
following  to win seats in Parliament. The last time a far-right party came 
close 
to  reaching the 5 percent threshold was in the 1970s, experts said.  
But the nation’s political geography is being reshaped by strong gusts of  
discontent blowing in from different directions. Public resentments toward  
Europe were fanned by the German-led bailout of Greece, which Germans saw as 
 paying for the profligacy and irresponsibility of others. At the same 
time,  Germans, particularly younger generations, are feeling less constrained 
by their  history and more comfortable in their national skin than at any 
time since World  War II.  
Into that environment came the book by the banker Thilo Sarrazin, “
_Germany_ (http://www.nytimes.com/info/germany?inline=nyt-geo)  Does Away With 
Itself,” which argues that the  nation’s generous social benefits have 
attracted 
large numbers of Muslim  immigrants who have refused to integrate. The book 
does not address any of the  endemic obstacles to integration, like 
discrimination in employment and mediocre  schooling, but instead labels Muslim 
immigrants as genetically inferior.  
The book and its popularity — it has already sold about 600,000 copies in  
little more than a month — represent the one issue that seems to have 
unified  the European public: hostility to foreigners, especially Muslims. 
Recent 
polls  here said that a right-leaning party could now receive up to 20 
percent of the  vote, which would put it in Parliament, according to reports in 
the German Press  Agency.  
“It would be hard to cover all of this under one theme. Xenophobia? Not  
really. But it could turn into something like it,” said _Michael Naumann_ 
(http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/people/n/michael_naumann/ind
ex.html?inline=nyt-per) , editor of the monthly political  magazine Cicero 
in Berlin, about the regional political developments. “The  search for 
scapegoats has started.”  
Political experts say that in addition to anti-immigrant sentiments, the 
new  right seems to be capitalizing on the sense among conservatives that Mrs. 
 Merkel’s Christian Democrats have abandoned them.  
Several high-level C.D.U. officials have stepped down recently amid  
complaints the party has lost its way, and this month party members called for  
steering the platform to the right, _which Mrs. Merkel rejected_ 
(http://www.dw-world.de/dw/article/0,,5998812,00.html) . One former member this 
 month 
created a new party, “The Freedom,” based on an anti-immigrant, 
anti-_European Union_ 
(http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/organizations/e/european_union/index.html?inline=nyt-org)
  agenda, and leading party 
officials have  acknowledged the need to improve the political dialogue in 
order 
to avoid  fueling the right.  
Erika Steinbach, the official _who made the remarks_ 
(http://www.nytimes.com/2010/09/17/world/europe/17iht-germany.html)  about 
Poland — and who leads 
a  group representing ethnic Germans who were expelled from parts of Eastern 
Europe  after the war — quit the executive committee of the Christian 
Democrats after a  decade of service, telling the German newspaper Die Welt, “I 
represent  conservatism there, but I feel more and more alone.”  
The Christian Democrats, the dominant political force here for decades, 
have  historically absorbed conservative, even moderately right-wing supporters 
while  presenting themselves as the guardian of Christian values. But 
lately the party  has been accused by some of its members of being no different 
from the more  liberal Social Democrats, and of enforcing a post-World War II 
political  correctness that restricts debate about many issues — 
nationalism, religion,  minorities, but especially _immigration_ 
(http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/subjects/i/immigration_and_refugees/index.htm
l?inline=nyt-classifier) .  
Mrs. Merkel was criticized by some for condemning Mr. Sarrazin — before she 
 had even read the book. Under pressure, Mr. Sarrazin resigned from the 
board of  the central bank, and his party, the Social Democrats, have begun 
proceedings to  expel him.  
To some observers, the political elites’ stern treatment of these new  
ultraconservative voices only enhances their appeal. “Steinbach is not very 
much 
 liked, although she and Sarrazin are seen as people who are breaking up 
the  politically correct tradition of dealing with the past,” said Wolfgang 
Nowak,  former senior adviser to the previous chancellor, _Gerhard Schröder_ 
(http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/people/s/gerhard_schroder
/index.html?inline=nyt-per) . “As most do not share their ideas,  they do 
not agree with the way they are silenced.”  
The C.D.U. faces a difficult balancing act, trying to acknowledge public  
frustrations without lending legitimacy to xenophobic and racist views. To  
ignore the problems, some say, potentially opens the field to right-ring  
parties. “This means that right-wing populist parties enter a vacuum that comes 
 into being because many people get the feeling that politicians are not 
aware of  their day-to-day lives,” said Wolfgang Bosbach, a party member and 
deputy head  of its bloc in Parliament.  
At the moment, no one here is predicting the rise of a successful 
right-wing  party, but that is because the main ingredient is missing: a 
charismatic 
leader  to rally the public. With such a leader, and some financial support, 
the  prospect could take on a life, political experts said.  
But in Germany, where history still weighs heavily, who would dare?  
“It is too early to say how it will turn out,” said Hans-Otto Bräutigam, a 
 former German ambassador and political independent. “It may happen; I am  
worried. There are signals and signs but they are not yet clear. I still 
hope we  can overcome these problems with solutions.” 

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