TNE logo

German FDP chief under fire as support slumps

German Chancellor Angela Merkel's Free Democrat (FDP) partners have seen their popularity slump and relations within the coalition have soured over issues from taxes to welfare benefits just four months after it took office

15/02/2010

Article tools

At the centre of controversy is outspoken FDP Foreign Minister Guido Westerwelle, who has come under a barrage of criticism from his own party and Merkel's Christian Democrats (CDU). Polls show support for the pro-business FDP has nearly halved since September's election to about eight percent.

One former CDU cabinet minister, deriding Westerwelle's description of unemployment benefits as reminiscent of Roman decadence, described him as an ass.

FDP supporters feel let down by a failure to deliver substantial tax cuts. Party credibility also took a hit when a 1.1 million euro donation from a hotel group owner emerged after the government pushed through tax breaks for hotels.

In response, Westerwelle has reiterated his determination to see through tax cuts despite Germany's strained public finances and adopted arguments on welfare benefits to appeal to his core voters which are putting strains on the coalition.

"The image of this government in its first few months has been poor and doubts could grow about Merkel's ability to lead unless she is firm with Westerwelle," said Gero Neugebauer, a political analyst at Berlin's Free University.

The conservative-FDP coalition was welcomed by business when it won power in September as a break from the wrangling that beset the previous conservative-Social Democrat coalition.

Westerwelle caused a storm recently by describing as socialist Germany's attitude to the welfare state - a relatively generous net of benefits and support that formed the foundation of German state reconstruction after World War Two.

He compared long-term unemployment benefits to "late Roman decadence" and insisted the system needed a radical rethink.

Scorn
In a sign of the growing tensions in the coalition, conservatives have poured scorn on Westerwelle.

"In Roman times, decadence was about... Emperor Caligula appointing his ass as consul. Westerwelle's comparison is right up to a point: 100 days ago, an ass became foreign minister," former CDU cabinet minister Heiner Geissler told Die Welt paper.

Westerwelle's cabinet colleague, CDU Labour Minister Ursula von der Leyen, also distanced herself, saying the welfare state had proved itself in the last 60 years and she saw no decadence.

The debate also triggered criticism from senior FDP colleagues about his leadership style. Some have demanded he relinquish some of his responsibilities. As foreign minister and party head, many think Westerwelle has too much on his plate.

"The party leadership needs to be stronger as a team. More FDP faces need to be in the foreground," Westerwelle's deputy Andreas Pinkwart told the Hamburger Abendblatt, adding the slump in the polls showed voters were very disappointed with the FDP.

A key test comes in May with an election in Germany's most populous state, North Rhine-Westphalia (NRW).

It is uncertain if the CDU and FDP will hold the state. Analysts say the FDP is doing so badly, the CDU may be forced to find another partner in the Greens.

"If the NRW vote goes badly for the FDP, pressure will grow on Westerwelle to give up some responsibility. That looks bad, said Dietmar Herz, political scientist at Erfurt University.

"The FDP has been thrown into a panic. Westerwelle has gone storming in and tried to appeal to his core supporters but it's unclear if his strategy will work," added Herz.

The effect could be to limit the appeal of the FDP, traditionally seen as a party for young professionals, which Westerwelle successfully widened in 11 years of opposition.

Leave a comment

5 		stars5 stars5 stars5 stars5 stars
 4 stars4 stars4 stars4 stars4 stars
 3 stars3 stars3 stars3 stars3 stars
 2 stars2 stars2 stars2 stars2 stars
 1 star1 star1 star1 star1 star

International Affairs Articles

Also in this section

Gazans want "Marshall Plan", Israel policy falls short

Wael El Wadiah's Gaza snack food factories once employed 250 people. Today, denied access to the Wes...Read more

Provinces become battleground in China's WTO offer

Talks over China's offer to join the World Trade Organisation's government procurement agreement wil...Read more

Rural schools from apartheid cloud S Africa's future

A tap with running water came when apartheid ended, electricity came 14 years later but the text boo...Read more

Doha talks in 2011 hinge on US politics-India

There is likely to be little movement in the Doha world trade talks by the end of this year and prog...Read more

Russia's Black Sea navy is burden for Ukraine

Russia's Black Sea fleet might not carry much weight in strict military terms but its presence in th...Read more

Brazil's Rousseff yet to emerge from Lula's shadow

A photo opportunity during Carnival is a must for Brazilian politicians and Dilma Rousseff, who is r...Read more

Dutch looking away from Europe

The collapse of the Dutch government over troop deployments in Afghanistan will distance the country...Read more

The downside of the Eurozone

Opponents of quick euro adoption have long argued that losing the flexibility of an independent curr...Read more

Chinese farmers struggle with climate change

In northwest China, farmers count the costs of a changing climate in lost crops, dry wells and lives...Read more

The new rust belt

Heavy industries across eastern Europe, once the beacons of communist “planned economies”, survived ...Read more

Riders on the storm

The Caribbean's small island states ride out hurricanes year after year, but they are fighting to st...Read more

Terminal failure

From queuing barges and traffic jams to falling cargo volumes and quieter terminals, a struggle with...Read more

Solidarity workers defiant as bailouts mount

Two decades after they helped overthrow communism in eastern Europe, shipyard workers in Poland's So...Read more

Watching the despots

New satellite imaging technology is making it easier for the international community to keep an eye ...Read more

A social time bomb

Tensions mounting between native job-seekers and immigrants competing for a declining pool of work i...Read more

Reverse brain drain

The economic crisis that has sent the US economy into its worst recession in decades, has tarnished ...Read more

Qualitative growth

A conceptual framework for finding solutions to our current crisis that are economically sound, ecol...Read more

Still ahead of the curve

Oscar Niemeyer has created some of the most iconic buildings of the twentieth century...Read more

787 powers on

The power's on to the 787 Dreamliner, but it comes more than a year after it was originally schedule...Read more

Conspiracy theories through the ages

Since Plato's Republic, man has wrestled in the political arena, concealing various daggers behind m...Read more

Drugs of choice

Small Thai firms are taking on the giants over the production of generic versions of potential lifes...Read more

Finding FDI hotspots

Direct investment is approaching record levels, but which countries are attracting the most money?...Read more

Virtual edition

In this issue, we list our 40 most innovative companies in the world and bring you the facts and figures from the latest developments making the news...
Report: NASA'S outdated labs jeopardise research

Report: NASA'S outdated labs jeopardise research

Many of NASA's research labs are old, and budget cuts have seriously jeopardised scientific research at the space agency, according to a National Research Council report

Nations pledge record $4.25bn for environment fund

Nations pledge record $4.25bn for environment fund

Donor countries have pledged a record $4.25bn over the next four years for the Global Environment Facility, the world's largest public green fund that helps developing countries tackle climate change

Falling mortar renews worry over Rome's Colosseum

Falling mortar renews worry over Rome's Colosseum

Falling chunks of mortar from Rome's Colosseum has rekindled the debate about the state of the Italian capital's archaeological treasures - some of which are literally falling apart

China wagers on long-term stake in North Korea

China wagers on long-term stake in North Korea

China won no clear dividends from North Korean leader Kim Jong-il's latest secretive visit but showed it will wager major economic and diplomatic stakes on shaping its neighbour's shaky future