The Left Berlin News & Comment

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News from Berlin and Germany, 4th June 2025

Weekly news round-up from Berlin and Germany


04/06/2025

NEWS FROM GERMANY

Klöckner threatens to ban Nietzard from the Bundestag

An Instagram post with an anti-police sweater is putting Green Youth leader Jette Nietzard under increasing pressure, and an internal letter from Bundestag President Julia Klöckner (CDU) to the Greens could continue to cause considerable political tension. Nietzard posted a photo on Instagram with a sweater bearing the inscription “ACAB” (“All Cops Are Bastards”), with the provocative caption “On my way to the Bundestag.” According to the Bild newspaper, Klöckner reacted with harsh criticism and threatened Nietzard with concrete consequences: Up to 5,000 euros in fines and, in the event of a repeat offense, even a ban from the house. Source: BZ

“Beck is the mouthpiece of the far-right government”

There is a dispute within the German-Israeli Society (DIG) over Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s handling of the Gaza offensive. Former DIG President Reinhold Robbe (SPD) affirmed that the current DIG President Volker Beck (Greens) had “now become the mouthpiece of the right-wing extremist Israeli government.” “While thousands of Israelis demonstrate week after week in Tel Aviv against Prime Minister Netanyahu’s conduct of the war and for the return of the remaining hostages, DIG President Beck is trying to justify the disproportionality of the warfare, which has been confirmed by all sides,” says Robbe, who led the DIG from 2010 to 2015. Source: tagesspiegel

Racism and sexism on the rise in Germany

More than 11,000 people contacted the Federal Anti-Discrimination Agency in 2024—more than ever before in Germany. “Discrimination is a growing problem in Germany. We have a massive problem with racism, we have a massive problem with sexism. And we have a massive unwillingness to give people with disabilities equal participation,” says Ferda Ataman, Independent Federal Commissioner for Anti-Discrimination. However, she also sees the increase in requests for advice as a sign of confidence in the rule of law. Among the various groups, black women and women with headscarves are particularly targeted by racist hostility. Source: dw

Asylum: Dobrindt sticks to rejections despite ruling

Despite a court ruling, Federal Interior Minister Alexander Dobrindt (CSU) is sticking to his strict course on immigration to Germany. In a first case concerning two men and a woman from Somalia, the administrative court in Berlin declared the new rejection practice unlawful in summary proceedings on Monday. Dobrindt nevertheless affirmed that “we are sticking to the rejections.” The court had referred to an individual case in its summary judgment, while Dobrindt’s ministry is seeking a decision in the main proceedings. The CSU Minister explained that the judges had requested more detailed reasons for the rejection. Source: dw

Germany is third last in terms of economic growth

According to the OECD (Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development), Germany will be one of the slowest growing industrialized nations this year. Gross domestic product (GDP) is expected to increase by 0.4%, as the OECD confirmed in its March forecast. This puts Europe’s largest economy in the third-to-last place in the OECD’s growth forecast for 2025, together with Mexico. It is followed by Austria and Norway. In 2026, growth is expected to reach 1.2%, compared to the previous forecast of 1.1%. According to the OECD, the global economy is only expected to grow by 2.9% in both 2025 and 2026, compared to 3.3% last year. Source: taz

Germany says it has approved over €485M worth of arms exports to Israel since October 2023

From October 7, 2023, to May 13, 2025, Germany issued export licenses for arms deliveries to Israel totaling €485.1 million, according to the government’s response to a question in parliament from Die Linke. The approved exports include a broad range of military equipment including weapons systems, ammunition, radar and communication devices and parts for armored vehicles. The government observed it had provided only limited information about the nature of the exports, citing a Federal Constitutional Court ruling that restricts the disclosure of details which could reveal Israel’s current military capabilities or needs. Source: aa

Is Labour Losing its Identity?

Analysis on the shapeshifting progression of the UK Labour party’s values

Keir Starmer delivering a speech at a podium

In July of last year, Keir Starmer and the Labour party galloped to a sizable landslide victory in the UK general election, securing the biggest majority government in 25 years. This put an end to 14 years of Conservative rule which had left many voters yearning for something new. This sentiment was reflected in Labour’s simple, one-word campaign slogan: Change.

I was one such voter. I began to gain political consciousness when I was 11 years old, around the time the previous Labour government was leaving office in 2010. Over the proceeding 14 years I witnessed the fallout of austerity, the disastrous Brexit referendum, and the mismanagement of the Covid pandemic. All failings inflicted on the UK by successive Conservative governments. By the time of the 2024 general election, I too was longing for change.

Any hopes I had of a dramatic swing towards a more social-democratic style of government under Labour were, at first, cautious. During the election campaign, Labour had adopted the strategy of shadowing many Conservative policies, including the pledge not to raise VAT, national insurance, or income tax. The idea presumably being that if there was less breathing room between the two parties on policy it would leave Labour less vulnerable to Conservative attacks and that the widespread voter dissatisfaction with the Tories would do the rest.

In particular, there was a noticeable effort to portray Labour as being financially responsible; a reputation Prime Minister Rishi Sunak was seeking to reclaim for the Tories in the aftermath of his predecessor Liz Truss’ calamitous mini-budget.

The product of this strategy was a manifesto which contained, alongside the promise not to raise any of the three major taxes, pledges to cap corporation tax, secure Britain’s borders, and strictly control government spending––hardly the stuff of radical reform.

But as Keir Starmer walked up Downing Street on the morning of July the 5th, I held out hope that electoral strategy and governance would prove to be two different things. That, once in office, the Labour government would get on with the business of major, progressive change.

Instead, one of the first major policy announcements after the election was the removal of winter fuel allowance for all but the very poorest pensioners. This followed the suspension of seven Labour MPs who had voted for the SNP’s motion to scrap a cap on benefits for people with two children or more. This seemed more reminiscent of Tory austerity than a Labour renaissance.

Nonetheless there was, during the first weeks, evidence that progressive change might be coming down the line; the government went to great pains to explain that the country’s finances and public services were in a much worse state than had been previously thought. It appeared the ground was being laid for a reversal of the restrictive economic pledges made during the election; a loosening of the fiscal rules to allow more borrowing or a major progressive tax increase to fund ambitious public sector investment, perhaps?

This turned out to be partially true. The autumn budget did include a significant increase in the tax intake alongside a redefinition of debt which would allow for extra borrowing without actually loosening the fiscal rules. This would, Chancellor Rachel Reeves explained, free up extra funding for the NHS and local councils among other things. Was this a promising sign of things to come?

The spring statement in 2025 seemed to suggest otherwise. The government announced changes to disability welfare which amounted, in effect, to a cut, as well as significant cuts to the international aid budget. Measures such as these have led much of the public to start believing that Labour is taking Britain back to austerity.

There have been a few things which will satisfy Labour’s traditional base such as legislation to take the rail companies into public ownership or to initiate the setting up of the publicly owned energy company Great British Energy. But until recently Keir Starmer’s Labour party appeared to be partly recycling its 2024 election strategy as its strategy for government––shadow the opposition.

Unlike during the election however, recent opinion polls suggest the real opposition to the Labour party, amongst the electorate anyway, is now the right-wing populist Reform party. Despite only having five elected MPs (although one has since been suspended from the party), Reform has replaced the Conservatives as the second-largest party in some polls. Knowing that Reform came a close second in many Labour heartland constituencies, the Labour party seems to have concluded that it needs to win back some Reform supporters in order to achieve a second term.

A sensible approach based on this conclusion might indeed include moving closer to Reform’s positions on some issues. Consequently, some Labour policies, such as cutting international aid and implementing stricter immigration rules, can be found within the pages of the remarkably thin 2024 Reform party manifesto; policies which have led the public to conclude that Labour is trying to appeal to Reform voters more than its own base.

However, the strategy which worked so well for the general election has been proving to be less effective now that Labour is in government. Recent local elections saw Reform take control of 10 local councils and two mayoralties with Labour losing its only council up for election and one mayoralty. Labour also lost a closely fought by-election to Reform who overturned a huge Labour majority of 14,696.

Sensational local election results do not, it must be said, always translate into sensational general election results. But this was certainly a shot across the Labour bow and it caused many party members to wonder how best to react.

MPs, including some cabinet ministers, reported that the means-testing of winter fuel payments and the reforms to disability benefits were brought up time and again on the doorstep as reasons for not voting Labour in the run up to the local elections, and some suggested that the government change course. This suggestion was promptly rejected by Downing Street, however.

For weeks, the government seemed intent on staying the course but has recently announced that at least a partial U-turn is coming. Changes made at the next financial statement will ensure more pensioners qualify for the winter fuel allowance. But will this be enough to win back voters who think Labour has sacrificed fundamental party values?

With such a large majority in parliament Starmer has the political capital to draw on the reforming spirit of the post-war Labour Prime Minister Clement Attlee and call for a more ambitious, far-reaching plan of national renewal. Instead, the government is pursuing a more prudent path, on both economic and social issues. It risks dividing its attention, pandering to different bases and pleasing none as it promises tolerance and compassion whilst drawing comparisons with Enoch Powell. Lines from a recent speech held by Starmer on immigration policy have been pointed out as being reminiscent of the Conservative MP’s infamous anti-immigrant Rivers of Blood speech made in 1968.

The dire consequences of giving up fundamental party values are illustrated by the near extinction of the Liberal Democrats after their stint in coalition with the Conservatives. If Labour wants to avoid a similar fate, it must stop courting the Right and deliver the progressive policies people expect from them.

The electoral risks of pandering to the Right and further disillusioning swathes of the electorate are clear. But beyond the prospect of punishment at the ballot box, Labour also risks losing its identity. Even if the 2024 strategy of right-wing appeasement would work at the next general election, it would be nothing to celebrate. A second term in office is all well and good, but if it is achieved at the expense of progressive policies, then it will have been for nothing.

Freedom Flotilla Coalition

We sail until Palestine is free

This week, the Gaza Freedom Flotilla set sail from Sicily, with a number of activists including Greta Thunberg. The Freedom Flotilla Coalition (FFC) is a grassroots people-to-people solidarity movement composed of campaigns and initiatives from different parts of the world, working together to end the illegal Israeli blockade of Gaza.

Our goals are:

  • To break Israel’s more than 17-year illegal and inhumane blockade of the Gaza Strip, which has not only created an ongoing humanitarian crisis but has deprived Palestinians in Gaza of their right to health, safety, and freedom of movement, among other fundamental human rights.
  • To educate people around the world about the blockade of Gaza, the unlivable conditions it enforces, and the fact that this colossal human suffering is not a natural catastrophe, but created by political and military choices.
  • To condemn and publicize the complicity of other governments and global actors in enabling the blockade. Most notably, the US government has underwritten Israel’s violence against Palestinians for decades, funding Israel’s military at the rate of approximately 4 billion dollars every year and using most of its vetos in the UN Security Council in the last three decades to protect Israel from condemnation for its humanitarian crimes and violations of international law.
  • To respond to the cry from Palestinians and Palestinian organizations in Gaza for solidarity in breaking the blockade. We want to show the people in Gaza that people and organizations around the world stand for and support their struggle for dignity and freedom.

The Freedom Flotilla Coalition came into being in 2010 and guides its work in accordance with the explicit goals and plans of the people in Gaza. Our direct action missions support the dignity and humanity of Palestinians, working with civil society partners, rather than any party, faction or government. Our actions against the blockade are always governed by the principles of non-violence and non-violent resistance. 

We respect everyone’s human rights regardless of race, gender, tribe, religion, ethnicity, nationality, citizenship, disability, sexual orientation, or language.  Because we respect everyone’s human rights, we stand in solidarity with the Palestinian people in their quest for freedom, equality, and human rights.

There is extensive information about previous Freedom Flotillas here. Previous Freedom Flotilla missions have included: Ship to Gaza Greece, the European Campaign to End the Siege of Gaza, and Miles of Smiles.

In partnership with Forensic Architecture, the FFC has equipped the ship Madleen with a live tracker to ensure safety, accountability, and global solidarity. As she sails to break Israel’s illegal blockade of Gaza, the risk of attack is real. The tracker broadcasts her position in real time, deterring violence, exposing any aggression, and allowing the world to witness this mission of resistance.

Through this collaboration, we are not only increasing transparency, we are building a framework for justice. The tracker transforms a solitary vessel into a globally witnessed journey, making it harder for any violations to occur unnoticed or unchallenged. Follow Madleen. Stay alert. Stand with Palestine. You can follow Madleen in real time here.

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