Being a Woman in German Politics Still Isn’t
Easy. Annalena Baerbock’s Rise and Fall Shows Why.
The candidate's struggles reminded female politicians
in Germany that even after 16 years of Angela Merkel, the country has a long
way to go.
By EMILY
SCHULTHEIS
09/25/2021
09:26 AM EDT
https://www.politico.com/news/magazine/2021/09/25/german-election-annalena-baerbock-women-514150
Emily
Schultheis is a journalist based in Berlin, where she writes about European
politics and the rise of populist parties.
COLOGNE,
Germany — On a warm evening in early September, Annalena Baerbock took the
stage on a packed city square here. There were just over three weeks to go
until Germany’s general election, which will take place on Sunday, and around
2,000 people had come out to see the progressive, pro-environment Green party’s
first-ever candidate for chancellor. “You can feel the change here on
Wilhelmplatz,” Baerbock told the audience, to cheers and applause.
As she
spoke, four young girls toward the front of the crowd climbed a metal divider
to get a better look at the candidate. Baerbock, energetic with microphone in
hand, occasionally referred to them in her speech: When a handful of right-wing
protesters started shouting, she reminded them there were children present, and
during her Q&A session, she came over and answered the girls’ question
about how to live a more climate-friendly life. Over the course of the rally,
other girls wandered over from their parents until about a dozen stood there,
grouped together near the stage, eyes turned up toward Baerbock.
These girls
have an experience of politics American girls don’t: They have never known a
country in which a woman didn’t hold the highest office in the land. For the
past 16 years, Angela Merkel has been a steady hand at the country’s helm and
arguably the most powerful woman in the world.
But in
Baerbock's candidacy, they're also watching a real-time demonstration that even
in Germany — a country often held up as a model for embracing and re-electing a
powerful woman leader — sexism isn't easy to root out of politics. It can be
difficult even to disentangle the two.
Baerbock
was an early contender in the election, leading her two main rivals for several
weeks in the spring — an unprecedented feat for the Greens, who have never
before had a real shot at the chancellery. Since then, she has come under
unrelenting attack for a series of off-the-trail missteps, including
revelations of plagiarism and resume inflation, while male rivals have more
easily sidestepped their minor scandals. She has also been the target of frequently
gendered disinformation attacks, one of which featured her face photoshopped
onto a naked woman’s body with a caption implying she was a sex worker. Along
the way, Baerbock has faced more familiar examples of sexism, such as questions
about whether she can balance the chancellorship with being a mother.
The Greens
are now polling at 16 percent, behind the center-left Social Democrats and
Merkel’s conservative Christian Democrats, and Baerbock is effectively out of
the chancellor’s race. Baerbock herself has avoided speaking too explicitly
about sexism in the campaign, though others close to her have been vocal on the
subject. In an interview with POLITICO Magazine this month, she mentioned the
connection but was cautious about blaming the attacks on gender.
“There are
always going to be moments when, especially as people run out of real
arguments, they hit below the belt — we know that about campaigning,” Baerbock
said. “But in this election, there's also been an element of hate and smear
campaigning, that's been exacerbated by social media, at times gender-based.”
Her
candidacy has left German political observers wrestling with the question of
just how open-minded Germany actually is when it comes to women leaders.
Baerbock might be the second woman to run for Germany’s top office, but she’s
the first to experience the post-Merkel climate for female politicians seeking
the job. It’s a contradictory environment in which a female candidate is no
longer a historic first and embracing gender is far more culturally accepted —
but in which the winner will preside over a parliament that is still more than
two-thirds male, more skewed than many of Germany's European neighbors. And, at
least for Baerbock's supporters, it's hard not to look at the substance and
tone of the attacks on her and detect very different treatment than her rivals.
"One
can't say that Germans don't trust a woman to do [the job of chancellor]. We
had a first example,” said Franziska Brantner, a member of parliament from the
Greens who led the party’s campaign in the state of Baden-Württemberg earlier
this year. “But still, a female candidate is getting different attacks — and on
a different level — than male counterparts.”
Female
politicians in Germany are disappointed, but not surprised, that a country that
has broken such a visible gender barrier still has so far to go.
"You
would think that, with a female chancellor leading the government, things would
have steadily improved for women in politics,” said Sawsan Chebli, a state
secretary in Berlin’s city government who is running for the Bundestag as a
Social Democrat. “I wish that were the case.”
In many
ways, Baerbock is exactly what Merkel wasn’t: She’s young (just 40 years old),
running on a platform of structural change (Merkel leads one of the two major
centrist parties), and has openly embraced being a woman and mother (the
chancellor has, until recently, largely avoided discussion of gender).
When Merkel
first ran for chancellor in 2005, she faced her own uphill road: Ascending the
ranks of the male-dominated CDU, she was referred to as “Kohl’s girl,” a
reference to former Chancellor Helmut Kohl, Merkel’s mentor and predecessor as
party leader. She’s gotten questions about her clothes, and critics have
implied that as a woman without children she doesn’t fully understand the lives
of mothers and families. Even the well-known nickname often applied to Merkel,
Mutti (or “mother”), has sexist undertones.
The
difficult atmosphere Merkel has confronted might help explain why women’s
representation hasn’t advanced as much as some hoped during her 16-year tenure.
She chose early on to strategically downplay her gender, and likely calculated
that for a leader of the conservative CDU, becoming a vocal champion of
feminist politics would be a liability.
Just 31
percent of the members of Germany’s parliament are women, which is higher than
the U.S. Congress (27 percent) and the global average (25 percent) but lower
than many of Germany’s European neighbors. Four years ago, the percentage was
actually higher — 37 percent — but dropped when the heavily male, far-right
Alternative for Germany party won seats in 2017. In executive positions, women
are far rarer: Just 9 percent of Germany’s mayors are women, and women lead
only two of the 16 federal states.
Only since
Merkel announced that she wouldn’t seek a fifth term has she begun to speak
more openly about gender and feminism. In 2019, in a rare long-ranging
interview, she discussed the challenges of being a woman in politics (“I wear
the same blazer four times within two weeks, the letters start pouring in,” she
said) and the need for gender parity in public life, which she said “just seems
logical.”
And earlier
this month, she finally used a word that remains loaded in German politics:
“Yes, I'm a feminist,'" Merkel said for the first time.
That Merkel
has become more comfortable opening up about the topic may be a sign of the
changing times. Baerbock, by contrast, speaks on the campaign trail about being
a mother to two young daughters, and spent much of a recent debate performance
discussing policies to lift up women in Germany.
But the
Green candidate has confronted a challenge that Merkel, who still doesn’t have
a Twitter account, didn’t have in 2005: online hate speech and disinformation
attacks that experts say are often gendered and disproportionately target
women.
Baerbock has
been hit by an especially high amount of disinformation, according to studies
by the German Marshall Fund and the Institute for Strategic Dialogue, from
Russian state-backed sources as well as from inside Germany. Some of these
attacks play on preconceived notions about the Greens, like the false claim
that the party wanted to ban housepets to reduce carbon emissions. But other
attacks have been distinctly sexist: One image that made the rounds online
featured Baerbock’s face photoshopped onto a naked female body with the
caption, “I was young and I needed the money.”
Michael
Kellner, the Greens’ campaign manager, has spoken out about the
disproportionate challenges Baerbock has faced due to her gender. “As an
experienced campaign manager, I can tell you that this spread of hate and lies
affects women much more than men,” he told Die Zeit in June.
Female
candidates from across Germany’s political spectrum are familiar with online
abuse. Earlier this year, the magazine Der Spiegel found that 69 percent of
female parliamentarians in Germany had experienced "misogynistic hate,”
and 36 percent described physical attacks on themselves or on their office or
home. Similarly, the European Academy for Women in Politics and the Economy
recently found that female mayors in Germany experience significantly more
harassment.
This comes
as Germany, like other countries, is grappling with an overall rise in hate
speech, fueled in part by the AfD — a party which, like similarly-minded
politicians in the U.S., continually pushes the boundaries of what’s considered
acceptable speech.
Wiebke
Winter, a 25-year-old Bundestag candidate from Merkel’s center-right CDU, said
that overall, Germany’s political scene has become more welcoming to women
because parties like hers recognize they need to be more representative of the
population as a whole.
But after a
recent TV appearance where she discussed her role as her party’s new adviser on
climate issues, her Twitter account was flooded with hateful attacks. “I really
don't know why,” Winter said in an interview. “I think I broke too many clichés
at once: I'm a woman for climate in the CDU, and that's not the story that
people want to tell."
The online
harassment was one thing, but when someone started burning her campaign posters
close to her home, she contacted the police.
Chebli, the
SPD candidate in Berlin, travels with police protection due to the volume of
credible death threats she’s received. In Chebli’s case, multiple factors make
her a target: She’s not just a woman, but also a Muslim daughter of refugees
who speaks openly about racism in Germany. "Women who have a voice, who
are visible, who defend themselves — these are the ones who are most often
affected,” she said. "What happens online isn't detached from what happens
in analog life.”
Many of the
online attacks targeting Baerbock are examples of what the German Marshall Fund
calls “sexualized subversion of credibility” — playing on gender stereotypes to
enhance existing concerns about a female candidate’s competence and
trustworthiness. Baerbock took a number of hits that undermined her credibility
in voters’ eyes, and her candidacy never fully recovered.
After a
near-flawless campaign rollout in April, Baerbock’s party shot to first place
in the polls. She appeared on the cover of Der Spiegel, posing confidently with
her hands on her hips, projecting the assuredness and ease that her opponents
(both middle-aged white men) were lacking at the time. But the Greens’ numbers
began to decline after a series of unforced errors. First, German media
reported that Baerbock hadn’t disclosed supplementary income from her party.
Then, evidence emerged that she had inflated parts of her resume and
plagiarized numerous passages in her book (she has since apologized for the
plagiarism, promising to add more accurate citations).
Baerbock’s
missteps quickly became the defining narrative of her campaign: "Not even
a quarter [of Germans] still believe Baerbock!" read one headline from the
tabloid Bild.
But while
Baerbock’s allies acknowledge the campaign’s errors, some believe gender bias
is subtly amplifying an existing narrative of incompetence and inexperience.
Both her rivals, the CDU’s Armin Laschet and SPD’s Olaf Scholz, had minor
plagiarism scandals of their own; while neither was as extensive as Baerbock’s,
those revelations made far fewer waves and haven’t defined their campaigns in
the same way. And some of the more serious scandals the two male candidates
have faced, whether Laschet’s failure to distance himself from an ultraconservative
candidate in his party or Scholz’s involvement in a major tax-evasion
controversy, also had less of an impact. (On Thursday, my POLITICO colleagues
marveled at how Scholz had survived multiple scandals, calling him the “Teflon
candidate.”)
“Annalena
Baerbock obviously has to meet stricter standards than her competitors,” the
writer Tanja Dückers argued in a column for Deutschlandfunk.
Petra
Weißflog, head of the Greens in the eastern city of Cottbus, said things have
improved for women in politics since she first ran as her party’s lead
candidate in Brandenburg in 1994. But she can’t help feeling the party’s male
co-leader, Robert Habeck, would have been treated differently than Baerbock.
"These
small faux-pas that happened with Annalena, they weren't her fault: That was
her advisers, who didn't vet things as carefully as they should have,” Weißflog
said. "I think if these things had happened to Robert, everyone would have
simply said, 'Well, he's a very busy man.’”
Candidate
for the Green Party Annalena Baerbock speaks at an election campaign event in
Wuerzburg, Germany, Wednesday, Sept. 22, 2021. German voters elect a new
parliament on Sept. 26 in a vote that will determine who succeeds Chancellor
Angela Merkel after her 16 years in power. (Nicolas Armer/dpa via AP)
Candidate
for the Green Party Annalena Baerbock speaks at an election campaign event in
Wuerzburg, Germany, in September 2021. | Nicolas Armer/dpa via AP
For
advocates of women in politics, the questions about Baerbock’s credibility
highlight a familiar difficulty: how to distinguish legitimate scrutiny of a
candidate’s competence from what they see as unfairly heightened expectations
for women.
The Barbara
Lee Family Foundation, which studies the challenges women face running for
office in the United States, has found that voters tend to assume men are
qualified but need more evidence to believe the same of a woman — especially
when she is running for executive office.
Amanda
Hunter, the foundation’s executive director, says this dynamic makes it doubly
difficult for Baerbock, who is already facing questions about her
qualifications for the job due to her lack of executive experience. “Attacking
a woman's qualifications is a tried and true tactic in a campaign, because it
can be very effective,” she said. “So the allegations of plagiarism, for
example, or whether or not she inflated her resume — those chip away at the assumption
that she is competent, which is already a weak spot for women.”
Watching
Baerbock’s campaign try to recover from real political stumbles while grappling
with whether the reaction had a gendered element, I was reminded of the spring
of 2015. Back then, I covered Hillary Clinton’s nascent presidential campaign
for National Journal, including the unfolding scandal over Clinton’s private
email server. The server was a substantive problem that also exacerbated an
existing narrative about Clinton — that she considered herself above the rules
— just as Baerbock’s issues have underscored her youth and lack of experience.
Of course,
Clinton was one of the most experienced presidential candidates in recent
memory and a well-known, highly polarizing figure long before her campaign.
Baerbock, meanwhile, was a political newcomer when she became the Greens’
co-leader in 2018 and, unlike Clinton, is running on a progressive platform
advocating fundamental change. Her party proposes investing massively in
climate infrastructure, phasing out coal years earlier than the current
government planned and raising taxes on high earners, among other initiatives.
Still, the
sense that smaller scandals are cumulatively having an intangible, yet
undeniable, impact on a female candidate’s chances feels remarkably familiar.
Baerbock
nodded to the parallels in her conversation with POLITICO Magazine: “It's a
phenomenon that we’ve already seen in the latest U.S. elections,” she said.
Verena
Duden, a Greens supporter in the northern city of Kiel, said after a party
rally this summer that she did see a gender element to the way Baerbock’s
credibility had tanked.
“The
mistakes happened, that’s not a question,” she said. “But I think … in
politics, people react much more aggressively to women. Especially in social
media, where you don't have to use real names to express yourself, I really
have the feeling that there really is a difference.”
Despite the
hurdles female German politicians face, one thing has certainly improved since
Merkel’s first run in 2005: Openly discussing gender-based discrimination and
abuse is far more accepted.
When Winter
was attacked on Twitter, she was heartened by the support she received.
"Many other people jumped on top of it, even from other parties, which I
really appreciate — from the Green Party, from the Social Democrats, from the
liberals,” she said. “So many people called and asked me how I was."
Taking
audience questions toward the end of her rally in Cologne, Baerbock was asked,
“How do you deal with people who insult you?” There were a few knowing chuckles
from the audience as Baerbock considered her answer.
“That’s a
very good question,” she said seriously. “How do I deal with it when people
attack me? I have a very, very amazing party. And I have so many people who
say, ‘That’s not how we should speak to each other.’”
“The
absolute most important thing,” she added, “is that you’re not alone.”
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