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Old 20-06-10, 08:44 AM
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Default Joachim Gauck: the dissident hero who holds the destiny of Germany in his hands

From the Guardian

Joachim Gauck: the dissident hero who holds the destiny of Germany in his hands

In a blow to chancellor Angela Merkel, a pastor who defied East Germany's bosses may be elected president instead of her candidate. But he says he has no wish to see her ousted as a result


By Kate Connolly
The Observer
Sunday 20 June 2010


He is the colourful pensioner at the heart of the most important presidential election in postwar German history. But Joachim Gauck insists that he never expected his race for high office to cause such a stir.

A Protestant pastor and anti-communist civil rights activist from east Germany, Gauck could be elected German president in 10 days' time in a vote that is widely being seen as an unofficial poll on Chancellor Angela Merkel's leadership. The silver-haired 70-year-old is being backed by the opposition Social Democrats and Greens, who believe that a defeat for Merkel's candidate, Christian Wulff, could lead swiftly to her own political demise.

At a time when the German government finds itself in a state of turmoil, riddled by rows over its handling of the debt crisis and the controversial bailout of the Greek economy, Gauck appears a little nonplussed to find himself the man of the moment. "I was surprised and flattered to be asked to run for the post," Gauck said. "But I didn't seek it, and it definitely wasn't my intention to unseat Merkel, and I'm sure she doesn't see it like that either – I just want to do what's best for the country."

The unexpected election is taking place following the shock resignation of President Horst Köhler this month. "We are at a crossroads in Germany," Gauck said. "There's a deep-seated sense of anxiety right now, and we need a new impetus. I notice that people aren't just interested in consumption and football, they also want to be able to believe in people and institutions again."

Many see Gauck as something of a moral authority who can bring fresh blood to German public life. Momentum is growing for the former dissident who, particularly as someone who stands outside party politics, is seen as a much more attractive figure than Wulff, a clean-cut, tanned, media-savvy career politician who is 20 years the priest's junior.

While the government factions – Merkel's Christian Democrats (CDU) and the Free Democrats (FDP) – hold a potential majority of at least 21 in the 1,244-seat special federal assembly that will choose the president, it is far from clear that the chancellor's candidate will win. Several members of the government faction, including members of the FDP, who have clashed repeatedly with Merkel since entering a coalition with her in October, have said they will vote for Gauck.

"He is a figure who is closely associated with the peaceful revolution in the GDR [East Germany] in 1989," said Holger Zastrow, head of the FDP in Saxony, in the former East. "He fought courageously and fearlessly for his convictions … he speaks from the soul and what he's done for this country, it's not something we can easily forget."

With his fascinating Cold War history, Gauck, a father of four who was born in the port city of Rostock, is undoubtedly one of the most interesting Germans alive. He says his political conscience was initially awakened by the arrest, when he was 11, of his sea-captain father on suspicion of espionage. He was taken from the family dinner table to a gulag in Siberia and the Gaucks did not see him for almost five years.

"The fate of our father was like an educational cudgel," Gauck said. "It led to a sense of unconditional loyalty towards the family which excluded any sort of idea of fraternisation with the system."

Banned by the regime from studying German and history because of his political opposition, he was forced to study theology and later trained to become a pastor. He led huge peaceful opposition marches in 1989, which partly led to the fall of the regime. His sermons from that time are famous.

Following reunification, Gauck was in charge of the state-run archives on the Stasi secret police, and won both recognition and enemies for exposing their crimes and espionage techniques.

He describes himself as a "leftwing liberal conservative," but did not vote for the first time until he was 50, having spent most of his life living under the GDR dictatorship. The experience, he said, had made him passionate about democracy. What makes his candidacy particularly awkward for Merkel is that the two are friends who have always shown deep respect for each other.

The chancellor even read the tribute at his 70th birthday, praising him as an "outstanding personality". Having both grown up in East Germany, Gauck and Merkel – herself a priest's daughter – have had similar life experiences.

Of Merkel, Gauck only has words of praise: "She's powerful, innovative, imaginative, and unlike many in this country she doesn't immediately take the position that everything is doom and gloom. She's an optimist," he said.

Yet it is the 70-year-old pastor who could yet bring her down. Some commentators have described it as a "Shakespearean scenario".
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Old 20-06-10, 08:52 AM
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I don't agree with the conclusions of the above article.

The election can be construed as a "plebiscite" against chancellor Merkel, but even if it is, this would have little to do with the person of Gauck. It would happen anyway. If the people of Germany no longer support the course that the government is taking, the government will not get reelected. It's as simple as that.

On the other hand, I would not even interpret the election of the German president as a "plebiscite." The presidency in Germany is a largely non-political institution. Germany needs as its president a person with moral and ethical integrity, someone who can serve as an example for the people. Germany doesn't need a career politician in this position, and the election should not be based at all on party politics.

Gauck is that moral authority, and therefore, he should be the winning candidate. If everything goes well, he should be elected with a very comfortable majority coming from all ranks of all political parties, and party affiliation should have very little to do with how the individual members of the federal assembly cast their vote.
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Old 20-06-10, 10:04 AM
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What's the role of a president in Germany? Is it a bit like the British Queen?
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Old 20-06-10, 12:14 PM
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Originally Posted by Gilles de Rais View Post
What's the role of a president in Germany? Is it a bit like the British Queen?
Yes ... or the Israeli president. The German president does not have a political role per se. It is expected that the president may help to reduce the political infighting. His role is to unite.
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Old 30-06-10, 05:48 AM
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Default Angela Merkel faces vote of confidence over poll for president

From the Guardian

Angela Merkel faces vote of confidence over poll for president

Ballot comes as popularity of chancellor sinks, but a win for rival candidate may end ruling coalition

By Kate Connolly in Berlin
The Guardian
Wednesday 30 June 2010


German chancellor Angela Merkel faces what amounts to a vote of confidence in her leadership today when parliament members and state representatives elect a new federal president.

Political analysts say that both Merkel and her nine-month old government could be forced to stand down if Christian Wulff, a career politician from Merkel's Christian Democratic Union (CDU), loses the vote to Joachim Gauck, a former civil rights activist backed by the opposition Social Democrats and Greens.

The vote, which will be decided by MPs and state representatives in a secret ballot in the Bundestag and could run to three rounds, comes amid intense disillusionment in Merkel's coalition.

The unhappy alliance of the CDU and the liberal FDP has seen its popularity drop from 48.4% to around 35%. Meanwhile, Merkel's personal popularity level has dropped to 39%, the lowest for several years.

The role of federal president is largely ceremonial and the vote to fill the post is normally a low-key affair, involving a special assembly of 1,244 delegates, half of whom are federal lawmakers, and half nominated by state parliaments. The representatives include a selection of celebrities and business figureheads, from paralympic champions to jazz musicians.

This time the stakes for Merkel are high, with her majority in the assembly just 21.

Delegates are expected to largely vote along party lines, so if Wulff does not win it would be a strong indication that Merkel had lost control of her majority.

Since the surprise resignation of the last president, Horst Köhler, over controversial remarks he made about German military involvement in Afghanistan, malcontents in the parliament have viewed the vote as an opportunity to bring Merkel down.

Potential rebels include some within Merkel's party and members of the FDP in former communist East German (GDR) states who view Gauck as a hero.

Gauck, 70, is a protestant pastor from Rostock who proved pivotal in the protest movement which helped bring down the Communist regime of East Germany in 1989. After the fall of the Berlin Wall he headed the archives of the former communist secret police, the Stasi, winning both friends and enemies when he exposed their crimes.

"My conscience would not allow me to vote for anyone other than Gauck," said Tino Günther of Saxony's FDP, who was also part of the opposition movement in the GDR.

"We should be free to vote for whoever we want."

Gauck has been touring towns recently, evoking the spirit of the former protests and delivering speeches about the time he met Martin Luther King, or the story of how his sea captain father was exiled to Siberia accused of spying.

He cuts a much more colourful and morally authoritative character than Christian Wulff, the 50-year-old state premier of Lower Saxony. Polls show that if the public were to be allowed to vote for president, Gauck would win easily.

The vote has caused wide political rifts, particularly between Merkel and the head of the SPD, Sigmar Gabriel, who leaked text messages sent between him and Merkel when deciding who the candidates should be.

A final decision is expected before the end of the day.

Merkel has also been criticised for insisting that the vote should take place along party lines.

Kurt Biedenkopf, a leading member of the CDU, has argued that the decision means the vote has largely lost its legitimacy.

"If it's along party lines, it creates the fatal impression that we're not voting for a new president, but we're making a decision about who is in power," he said.

Two former presidents, Richard von Weizsäcker and Roman Herzog, have voiced similar concerns, which has increased the pressure on Merkel.
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Old 30-06-10, 05:50 AM
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Originally Posted by Francois Cellier View Post
Merkel has also been criticised for insisting that the vote should take place along party lines.
This was a really stupid idea.
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Old 30-06-10, 10:33 AM
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Yep.

It seems her best strategy would have been to say, "this is kind of like electing the prom king, a matter of a popular figure, Gauck, rising and getting the votes. It has no wider political significance and doesn't mean I lost control of my majority. Thank you very much".

Instead of which, she seems to be indeed turning the affair into a personal referendum. Talk about stupid.
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