By George Will
Thursday, January 10, 2019
Berlin —
Armin-Paulus Hampel, a former journalist and commentator who now is a member of
the Bundestag, is ebullient, affable, opinionated, voluble, and excellent
company at lunch. But because his party is Alternative for Germany, one wonders
whether he is representative of it, and whether he is as congenial politically
as he is socially.
AfD is a Rorschach test for observers of German politics,
who see in it either a recrudescence of ominous national tendencies or a
healthy response of the political market to unaddressed anxieties. It was
founded in 2013, two years before
Chancellor Angela Merkel impulsively decided to welcome almost a million asylum
seekers, most from the Middle East. The nation was abruptly challenged to
become a melting pot at a moment when there was increasing interest in
recapturing a sense of Germanness.
Politics usually is grounded in grievances, and Hampel
nurses AfD’s originating complaint, which was that Germany’s role under the
EU’s common currency has been to bail out slothful, spendthrift Greeks and
other southern Europeans. In this, AfD resembles America’s tea-party movement, which
was a spontaneous combustion in response to TARP (the Troubled Asset Relief
Program), the bailout of banks and of people with improvident mortgages.
AfD is strongest where resentments are deepest — in what
was, until 1990, East Germany. There, change has come fast and hard, and
incomes are still significantly below those in the rest of Germany, which was
spared immersion in socialism. AfD has populism’s hostility to the disruptions
and homogenization that accompany globalization. Hence AfD partakes of
populism’s failure to will the means for the ends it wills: Globalization is
not optional for any developed nation, least of all Germany, which on a per
capita basis exports roughly four times more than the United States and ten
times more than China.
Hampel, who sits on the Bundestag’s foreign-relations
committee, is, to say no more, understanding of Russia’s ongoing aggression
against Ukraine, which he says has long been central to Russian identity, has
many ethnic Russians, and so on. He suggests that Russia’s behavior in its
sphere of influence is none of Germany’s business. His views on this — call it
“Germany first” — can be wrong without being disreputable. However, given what
is known about Russian meddling in other nations’ domestic politics, it would
be reassuring to know that AfD receives no Russian subventions. Three years
ago, hackers working for Russia penetrated the Bundestag’s computer network.
Last week, a hack attack victimized members of all Bundestag parties except
AfD.
Edmund Burke, founding father of modern conservatism,
said: “To be attached to the subdivision, to love the little platoon we belong
to in society, is the first principle (the germ as it were) of public
affections.” He meant that national patriotism sprouts from local soil, from
the rich loam of civil society’s communitarian institutions such as families,
churches, labor unions, clubs, service organizations, etc. But as the European
Union moves, more implacably than democratically, toward ever-deepening
“harmonization” of national political practices and economic policies, populist
movements recoil by embracing Europe’s nations themselves as the little
platoons, the molecular subdivisions that focus affections.
The Economist
magazine diagnoses many developed nations’ discontents as “an outbreak of
nostalgia,” an “orgy of reminiscence” that serves as “an anchor in a world
being transformed” and a “source of reassurance and self-esteem.” In Germany,
however, nostalgia is, for reasons as painful as they are obvious, still
problematic, even presumptively disreputable.
When an AfD election party concluded with participants
singing the national anthem, many scolds considered this transgressive. It is,
however, dangerous for a nation to detect danger in expressions of national
pride, or in the search for a national identity beyond economic success.
Suppress expressions of national pride and you risk reaping a curdled version
of pride.
A premise of post-war German politics has been that there
should be no party to the right of the Christian Democratic Union. There is
now, and AfD is the largest opposition party in the Bundestag. Hampel considers
AfD the “natural successor” to the CDU, which has governed Germany for 50 of the
last 70 years. His measured judgment is that Germany can have an AfD chancellor
in 2023. Then the party will be just ten years old. However, America’s
Republican party was just six years old when it won the presidency. But in 1860
the American nation was coming apart in an irrepressible conflict, which
stable, temperate Germany will not be unraveling four years from now.
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