Keir
Starmer doesn’t want the UK to end up like Germany
On a visit
to Berlin, the new British prime minister may look at Chancellor Olaf Scholz as
a cautionary tale.
August 28,
2024 4:00 am CET
By Sam
Blewett, Nette Nöstlinger and Esther Webber
https://www.politico.eu/article/keir-starmer-olaf-scholz-lead-uk-germany-power-election-brexit/
BERLIN — New
U.K. Prime Minister Keir Starmer is looking for lessons on how to keep a
center-left government in power. He won’t be taking them from Olaf Scholz.
The new
British PM flew into Berlin Tuesday night still basking in the glory of his
election victory last month. The man he is meeting, German Chancellor Scholz,
is on the opposite trajectory, languishing in the polls and facing a likely
election defeat next year.
While the
pair will have plenty to discuss, from tackling immigration to fending off the
populist far right, their contrasting political fortunes mean the new kid on
the block may well be the one giving tips to the more experienced world leader.
The new U.K.
prime minister’s choice of his center-left ally in Berlin for his first
bilateral visit will no doubt be a welcome distraction for Scholz as he battles
domestic pressures. Starmer arrived vowing to “turn a corner on Brexit,” as the
two leaders kick off talks to boost trade and defense cooperation.
But while
Starmer is pitching his Labour Party’s project as a decade of renewal, polls in
Germany suggest Scholz’s Social Democratic Party (SPD) is on the way out, with
the right and the far right making up ground.
One Downing
Street official, granted anonymity to speak candidly, acknowledged that Starmer
wants to avoid playing into the hands of the far right by repeating errors that
Scholz has made.
“Delivery is
absolutely paramount,” they said. So too, the official said, is carving out a
narrative “in which normal people can ‘see’ themselves and their interests
represented by the government.”
Watch out
for the far right — and climate
Emily
Thornberry, who until the July 4 election served as shadow attorney general for
England and Wales in Starmer’s shadow Cabinet and previously held the foreign
beat, said that two of the biggest problems that Germany and Britain face
actually overlap — climate change and far-right extremism.
“On climate
change, there might be some warnings on what can happen if the leadership
doesn’t get it right,” she told POLITICO, referring to electorally unpopular
measures taken by Scholz’s government to tackle emissions.
“When we
look at what’s happening in Germany, the lesson to learn is that the German
experience shows how very difficult it is to bring a coalition together to deal
with climate change … We certainly don’t want to end up with the views being as
polarized as they’ve ended up being in Germany.”
Starmer may
have won a massive majority, and Britain’s complex political system is set up
to keep out extremists, but his team is well-attuned to the many threats facing
the new government.
Starmer and
Scholz will be kicking off negotiations toward a new bilateral deal hoping to
boost defense and trade, and support for Ukraine’s resistance against Russia
will no doubt be a key topic of discussion.
“But the
context to all of it, underneath all of that, will be, how can the center left
command more secure majorities, given that the story so far from Germany, from
Australia, from the U.S, is that the center left can win again — but actually,
that’s only half the battle,” said Claire Ainsley, Starmer’s policy chief
between 2020 and 2022.
“Winning the
continued support of the public whilst in power is the next campaign.”
Jokers to
the right
Like
Scholz’s coalition, the new Labour government faces a potent threat from the
far right. The rioting targeting immigrants and people of color that blighted
England and Northern Ireland earlier this month had disparate causes, and
Starmer is hoping to tackle the roots of the unrest by delivering on everyday
issues.
t
But Nigel
Farage’s populist Reform UK party won 14 percent of the vote in the general
election compared to Labour’s 34 percent, riding a wave of disgust with
politics as the austerity-hit British state continues to crumble. Farage, the
famed Brexiteer, is also campaigning to cancel net-zero emissions targets.
Campaigning
as the widely expected victor, Starmer wasn’t the most electrifying of election
candidates. He may well now want to govern with a bit more pizzazz.
Cut from
similar cloth, Scholz earned himself the nickname “Scholzomat” — similar to
Theresa May’s “Maybot” moniker — due to his controlled and boring style.
The
sobriquet fit perfectly into the tradition of his predecessor, Angela Merkel,
who was seen as an anchor of stability. Unlike the former chancellor, however,
Scholz is perceived as lacking authority: In an August poll, in fact, some
three in four Germans said he lacked leadership.
Scholz has
also had to navigate several government crises with the potential to blow up
his coalition since taking over from Merkel in 2021.
Those ranged
from a bombshell ruling that blasted a €60 billion hole in the country’s
budget, to discord on support for Ukraine, and a surprising environmental
spanner in the works: heat pumps.
How not to
govern
As
chronicled by POLITICO, the far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD) weaponized
the cost of the governing coalition’s plans to ban the installation of gas
boilers from next year; the government ultimately watered down the legislation.
Ainsley said
the environmental mess was one of multiple what-not-to-do’s that Starmer can
learn from Scholz.
“The lesson
that you take from that is that voters, and their cost of living, really need
to be at the core of any environmental policies. In actual fact it’s going to
be detrimental to send any kind of message that voters should be paying for
climate policies,” she said.
“That’s why
Labour have partly learned that lesson and are really putting people’s bills at
the core.”
Joss Garman,
another former Labour adviser, who is now the executive director of the
European Climate Foundation, said Scholz’s heat pump experience “has become a
textbook case study of how not to do climate policy.”
Garman added
that while the U.K. is “in a much better place [than Germany] in terms of
levels of public support” for climate measures, there’s a “risk” of far-right
groups gaining traction with anti-green messaging if the government
“overreaches.”
Slamming on
the brakes
Another
familiar subject for Starmer and Chancellor Rachel Reeves will be Germany’s
“debt brake,” which limits the amount of debt the government can take on.
Those limits
are affecting Germany’s renowned infrastructure — and support for Scholz as
well. Though much of the problem predates the SPD’s term in power, voters are
still angry that the current government is not fulfilling some of its ambitious
plans.
“So it’s
that familiar story of needing and the public wanting spending on
infrastructure, but there being constrained finances to do that,” Ainsley said,
describing the dynamic as “a big takeaway.”
Persistent
infighting, particularly between the fiscally conservative Free Democrats and
their two more left-leaning coalition partners, the SPD and the Greens, have
also delayed policymaking and destabilized the alliance, a problem Starmer
doesn’t have after being elected in a landslide.
Voters
delivered a crushing blow to the ruling German coalition in the European
Parliament election in June, handing the SPD its worst national vote result in
more than a century. What’s more, in this Sunday’s critical state elections in
eastern Germany, all three parties are struggling to win enough votes to reach
even the 5 percent threshold needed to win seats in the state parliaments.
Meanwhile,
the AfD has continued to rise in the polls — from 11 percent in December 2021,
when Scholz took office, to 18 percent now — and is currently Germany’s
second-largest party.
Among the
reasons for its popularity is its seizure of an emotional debate on migration
that erupted in Germany this year in the wake of several knife attacks — a
theme familiar to Starmer following misinformation about an incident in which
three children were stabbed to death at a dance class in the northern town of
Stockport, which provided the spark for the recent riots.
He’s running
Despite his
historically low ratings, Scholz says he intends to run again for the
chancellery in Germany’s national election next year. But even those in his own
party don’t seem thrilled at the prospect, with only one in three SPD members
saying they want him to be their top candidate in a Forsa survey published in
July.
A person
closely connected to Labour, who was also given anonymity to speak candidly,
said Starmer wants to make as much progress as possible on a proposed new
security agreement with the EU under Scholz because he anticipates the task
will be more difficult under a successor.
A senior
aide with knowledge of Scholz’s thinking told POLITICO there was sympathy in
Berlin on the need for a security deal, particularly as such an arrangement
already exists between the U.K. and France, and between France and Germany.
The party
most likely to assume the chancellery next year, however, is Germany’s biggest
opposition force — an alliance between the Christian Democratic Union (CDU) and
its Bavarian sister party, the Christian Social Union — which is currently
polling in first place with around 31 percent.
That’s twice
as much as Scholz’s SPD, which is expected to win 15 percent. CDU boss
Friedrich Merz, who is expected to be Scholz’s main opponent next year, is
ideologically closer to the Tories and has praised their policies on migration
— namely the failed Rwanda deportation scheme for migrants.
Next stop
Paris
Despite the
turmoil, Sébastien Maillard, an associate fellow at the Chatham House
international affairs think tank, said it was not surprising that Starmer had
chosen Berlin as the first stop on his European diplomatic mission.
In addition
to the two leaders’ shared left-wing leanings, Maillard said, Germany is far
more eager to welcome the U.K. back into the European fold than is a “more
cautious” France, where Starmer will meet with President Emmanuel Macron after
departing Berlin Wednesday.
“I think we
know how much Germany was upset about Brexit from the very start, and really
misses this partner … France as well, but not to the same extent,” Maillard
said. “I’m sure Germany can be a good advocate within the EU of a U.K.
comeback.”
Starmer may
want to square some of those issues during a bilateral with Macron at the
Elysée Palace on Thursday, however.
Given the
electoral drubbings the French president has taken from both the left and the
far right in recent months, however, Starmer could well find himself receiving
tips on how not to blow it as a centrist.


Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário