Compared with past national election campaigns
in Germany, the current one seems to be designed to lull people into sleep, a kind of surrealistic sleep that can easily turn into a nightmare: Merkel’s CDU plasters the countryside with “Friede,
Freude, Eierkuchen” [peace, pleasure, and pancakes] posters
depicting smiling German families cooking together or
enjoying the beautiful German country side.
The main opposition party, SPD, runs a negative campaign against
chancellor Merkel, yet shows her on every SPD-poster in a rather
favourable light, repeating the statements she made about her government ("best government since unification"). The
SPD’s own candidate remains invisible on the posters and nearly
invisible on the campaign trail. While Merkel was on vacation, he
tried to pick up his attacks against her disastrous economic
management of the euro crisis – with little success as Germans do
not (yet) feel the crisis.
Meanwhile,
the Greens are making a fuss about the introduction of a “veggie
day” to lower Germans’ meat consumption which harms animals and damages the
environment. While this may be true, the
German voter must be shaking her head, thinking “as if we don’t
have other things to worry about”, fortifying the voter's perception of the
Greens as quixotic Bionade
elitists.
Even the left (Die Linke) is conspicuously tame, or so it seems as
the party's messages are being completely ignored by the mainstream German press.
Yet,
despite Merkel's continuing high popularity among the German people, her political standing could easily be challenged by spelling out the damage she has inflicted on the euro area (including Germany) since the start of the crisis, as I tried to do in my blog --->see the intro and many other posts describing the economic and human suffering Merkel's austerity policies have caused in Greece and other eurozone economies. The economic damage Merkel’s policies have caused will take years, if not decades, to repair.
Also: Merkel's perception as a good guardian of German taxpayers’ money is completely false. In fact, Merkel’s hesitant leadership at the very beginning of the crisis in Greece, combined with the economically idiotic austerity policies she and her finance minister Schäuble imposed on the Southern European periphery, unnecessarily cost German taxpayers a lot of money. And will do so in the future as Southern European economies continue to contract due to austerity, eroding tax bases and increasing (rather than lowering) public debt ratios, thus creating new financing gaps that need to be filled by European taxpayers.
Also: Merkel's perception as a good guardian of German taxpayers’ money is completely false. In fact, Merkel’s hesitant leadership at the very beginning of the crisis in Greece, combined with the economically idiotic austerity policies she and her finance minister Schäuble imposed on the Southern European periphery, unnecessarily cost German taxpayers a lot of money. And will do so in the future as Southern European economies continue to contract due to austerity, eroding tax bases and increasing (rather than lowering) public debt ratios, thus creating new financing gaps that need to be filled by European taxpayers.
In
addition to the economic damage, there is the political
damage: within a short time
span of 4 years, Merkel’s misanthropic handling of the euro crisis
has eroded the trust and respect of our European neighbors that took Germany more than 60 years to painstakingly rebuilt after the horrors of the second world war. There is no telling yet whether Merkel’s
policies have permanently damaged the European project, a project of
peace, economic cooperation, and solidarity among European nations and peoples. But the arrogant, boneheaded demeanor of high-level German government officials and the heartless treatment of Germany's Southern European euro zone partners has no doubt negatively affected Germany's image in Europe and beyond.
All these issues need to be addressed in a national election campaign,
and openly discussed in public fora. Instead: silence ! Meanwhile
the press contributes to the lulling in of the voter by disseminating the news that the eurozone’s
economy has started to grow again, omitting to mention that, on an
annual basis, the growth rate is still negative (see "Europe's False Recovery") .... and while 20 million Europeans (12.1%) remain stuck in unemployment, Merkel tells the
voters that the euro crisis is nearly over.
Bloomberg's editors are right in saying that "Germans deserve a franker discussion of their situation than the comforting homilies about thrift she [Merkel] delivers on the campaign trail. They need to hear that exporting their savings to the rest of the euro area contributed to the crisis [and] that the bailouts are helping German banks as much as [more than] the recipient countries".... (see "Front-Runner Merkel Owes Both Germany and Europe the Truth" and my post of June 30, 2013, "Economic Rebalancing in Europe requires Germany to reduce Inequality at Home").
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