Germany’s
far right woos the workers in election battle
Long the
preserve of the center left, factories now provide fertile territory for the
populist AfD party.
The assembly
of an electric vehicle in VW’s Zwickau factory
Robots
assemble electric vehicles in VW's Zwickau factory. | Nette Nöstlinger/POLITICO
February 10,
2025 4:00 am CET
By Nette
Nöstlinger and Carlo Martuscelli
ZWICKAU,
Germany — Volkswagen’s state-of-the-art
plant in this tidy eastern German city once symbolized the country’s bright
manufacturing future.
Now, it’s
fertile territory for Germany’s rising far right, which sees in the plant’s
myriad troubles — and rising fury among its workers facing job cuts — abundant
political opportunity.
“We want
Volkswagen to pursue a policy that is actually market-oriented and not a
planned economy,” said Lars Bochmann, a local politician in the far-right
Alternative for Germany (AfD) party who sits on the plant’s works council. “We
experienced that here when it was East Germany,” he added, referring to the
central planning of the former communist state.
Bochmann has
worked at the Zwickau plant for nearly three decades, most recently in quality
control, before being elected by workers to represent them in 2022. In that
time, VW has gone from a symbol of German manufacturing might to one embodiment
of the country’s economic malaise.
In December,
VW announced a deal with union representatives to cut 35,000 jobs over the next
five years to stave off considerably more painful measures. Earlier in the
year, VW had threatened to close factories in Germany for the first time in the
company’s long history, which stretches back to the Nazi era.
Bochmann is
in the vanguard of a concerted AfD effort to seize on growing dissatisfaction
among workers at VW, and also in the automobile sector and German commerce more
broadly. The party’s vehicle for this is a far-right organization called
Zentrum, or Center, which describes itself as an “alternative labor movement.”
Zentrum’s goal is to compete for the allegiance of workers in prominent trade
unions like IG Metall and Ver.di, which have deep links to the center-left
Social Democratic Party, long the party of German labor.
Should the
AfD make big inroads with traditionally left-wing union voters, their thinking
goes, political power will follow, or as Bochmann put it: “We are fighting in
local politics, but also while on the job.”
The plant in
Zwickau was VW’s first to only produce electric vehicles, representing the
carmaker’s effort to transition away from the combustion engine and compete
with United States and Chinese brands for the future of the automobile. But
Bochmann and his Zentrum colleagues blame precisely this move — VW’s focus on
electric vehicles and government subsidies to encourage their production — for
the company’s decline.
Ahead of a
national election on Feb. 23 in which the AfD is expected to take a strong
second place, Bochmann’s anti-Green, pro-combustion-engine message comes
directly out of the party’s election manifesto. It’s also a message that is
resonating with many of the plant’s workers, particularly in a part of the
country that counts as one of the AfD’s strongholds.
As workers
across Germany become increasingly unnerved by mass industrial layoffs, a
two-year economic contraction wrought by high energy costs and drop in global
demand for its exports, Bochmann sees a golden opportunity for Zentrum to
spread the message.
“In the
past, workers only spoke to us behind closed doors, but now they openly
approach us,” he said, dining on sausage and taking furtive puffs from his vape
in a restaurant on Zwickau’s central square. “We are on a path and hope that
this will eventually bear fruit politically, so that we can leave this vale of
tears again.”
The wheels
come off
It was a
moment of celebration and a source of pride when German President Frank-Walter
Steinmeier visited the Zwickau plant in the summer of 2023 to cement its status
as a great hope for the country’s economy. This is “a city that reflects the
major developments in automotive engineering like no other place in Germany,”
he told workers. “I have great respect for all those who are helping to
restructure our economy.”
Things
haven’t worked out as hoped. Two thousand fixed-term posts were cut at the
Zwickau plant last year. Output is to be halved from 2027 as part of a major
restructuring announced by Volkswagen as it tries to get a grip on its
deteriorating finances. Production of four of six electric vehicle models made
at the plant is to be relocated to two other German VW factories.
The plant’s
troubles have a variety of causes — including flagging growth in electric
vehicle sales and increased competition from China. Amid a budget crisis at the
end of 2023, the German government cut an electric vehicle subsidy program,
further undermining demand.
Even those
workers who don’t believe Zentrum provides an answer to their problems are
sorely disappointed.
“It feels
like a personal defeat,” said Carsten Friedrich, the head of assembly at the
plant,” as he strolled past workers and robots — which employees refer to as
“Robbies” — assembling ID.3s, the company’s first mass-market electric car.
“This is one of the deepest negative cuts I’ve experienced in 30 years of
professional life at VW.”
Marc
Stephan, the factory’s head of production, who zipped around the plant in an
electric car, shared the sentiment.
“People were
told we represent the future, and now the next thing we know, production is cut
in half,” he said. “That’s hard for our people and creates dissatisfaction and,
of course, openness to the populist spectrum.”
Across the
country, workers are already increasingly drawn to the AfD. The party finished
first among self-identified laborers in Germany during the European Parliament
election last summer — a jump of 23 percentage points from a decade earlier —
according to one poll. In that same election, the AfD outperformed among labor
union members, getting 18.5 percent of their votes compared to 15.9 percent for
the general public, according to the German Confederation of Trade Unions, or
DGB.
The AfD sees
an opportunity to strip away more of those union members, particularly in
Germany’s troubled automobile sector.
“Zentrum
does not have a large number of works council members overall, but it has
focused on key companies,” said Klaus Dörre, a sociology professor at the
University of Jena, who has studied the organization. “They have deliberately
selected the automotive industry because it is the heart of organized labor
relations. Their main argument is that works councils in big car companies are
part of the globalist elites and are, so to speak, pursuing globalization
against the interests of the German people and the German workers.”
‘Political
hegemony’
For a time,
Zentrum was too extreme even for the AfD.
The
organization was founded in 2009 by Oliver Hilburger, a worker at a Mercedes
plant in the southwestern city of Stuttgart with links to Germany’s
extreme-right scene, including as a member of a skinhead band that performed,
among other songs, an ode to Rudolf Hess, Adolf Hitler’s deputy as Nazi party
leader. In a 2022 documentary film, Hilburger attributed his involvement in the
band to the “allure of the forbidden.”
Hilburger
has in the past called accusations of extremism part of a “smear campaign” by
IG Metall and “its dirty allies in the media and politics.”
Originally,
the AfD put Zentrum on an “incompatibility list” of organizations too extreme
to work with. But as the AfD’s extreme-right flank grew in influence, the party
reconsidered. Björn Höcke, the head of the AfD in the state of Thuringia and
one of the party’s most extreme leaders, defended Zentrum during a speech at a
2022 party conference.
“Political
hegemony is based on cultural hegemony, and we will never achieve cultural
hegemony via the parliamentary route alone,” he said. Cultural hegemony, he
went on, meant saying “yes” to Zentrum and other “citizens’ movements.”
“We need
this foundation,” he added. “Without it, we are nothing and will not break
through.” After that, party members voted to remove Zentrum from their
incompatibility list, leading to growing cooperation.
Since then,
the organization has steadily grown, expanding into other sectors including
gastronomy and health care. During the Covid-19 pandemic, Zentrum actively
recruited among hospital workers skeptical of vaccine mandates for health care
professionals, according to a report in Die Zeit.
The AfD
isn’t the first far-right party to push for the working class vote. In France,
far-right leader Marine Le Pen has won over many workers who formerly supported
far-left parties by coopting economic policies of the left. The AfD, by
contrast, is calling for deregulation and tax cuts, and the restoration of
energy sources like cheap Russian gas.
“Everything
that is energy-intensive — aluminum, steel, fertilizers, cement — is going down
the drain, because these dunderheads in Berlin have simply put ideology before
reality,” said Matthias Moosdorf, an AfD parliamentarian from the city of
Zwickau. “It’s not just a political mistake, it’s a crime against the German
people.”
Other unions
actively warn employees to resist Zentrum, arguing that the organization
doesn’t truly have their interests in mind. In fact, because Zentrum isn’t an
official trade union under German law, it’s not allowed to negotiate wage
agreements.
“The common
thread running through Zentrum’s policy is that the main enemy is always IG
Metall and not the capital side,” said Lukas Hezel, who works for DGB and is
responsible for educating union members about Zentrum. “It really hardly ever
happens that they enter into any kind of conflict with management or take a
stand against the management.”
Despite such
criticism, Zentrum has been able to expand its presence. In a works council
election in January at the VW Zwickau plant, for instance, an “alternative
list” headed by Bochmann doubled its presence on the works council from two to
four members, a small victory in its campaign to chip away at the dominance of
IG Metall.
‘They killed
Germany’
It’s no
surprise that Chancellor Olaf Scholz’s SPD chose the central German city of
Wolfsburg for the party’s official election campaign kickoff event. The city is
home to VW’s headquarters and largest car-manufacturing plant in the world,
with its four towering smokestacks looming over the city like cathedral spires.
It remains one of the SPD’s dwindling heartlands, thanks, in no small part, to
the dominance of left-leaning trade unions among the plant’s 70,000 workers.
When Scholz
strode onto a stage for the campaign event not far from the VW plant on a
dreary January day, the crowd greeted him with polite applause. He then took
credit for steering the German economy through troubled times, with a war in
Ukraine driving up energy costs. Without SPD leadership, he argued, things
would have been far worse.
“When
everyone thought that a 10-year economic crisis was coming to Germany, that
factories would be shut down forever,” he said. “We made sure that it didn’t
turn out that way.”
That
evening, Daniela Cavallo, VW’s labor chief and a member of IG Metall, who was
at the center of the negotiations between the carmaker and the union to reach
the restructuring deal that warded off plant closures, praised the chancellor
and his party.
“I would
particularly like to emphasize that SPD politicians provided the greatest
support by far,” she said. “Here I include, quite clearly, Olaf Scholz, who
contacted me personally several times to accompany me during this time … I
would never have dreamed before that so much support would really come.”
But for
Cavallo and Scholz, there may be little cause for celebration as planned job
cuts at VW take effect over the next years. The SPD is already polling a
distant third nationally. With no end in sight to Germany’s economic troubles,
VW’s deal with unions to avoid plant closures in the country may only prove to
be a temporary reprieve.
Outside the
event hall where center-left politicians and trade union members praised one
another, there were signs that, even in this bastion of the SPD and traditional
unions, the fortress walls are crumbling.
At a bar
across the street from the entrance to the VW factory one afternoon, a grizzled
metalworker who works at the plant sipped coffee and took drags from his
cigarette. The man, who only gave his name as Andreas P. out of fear of
blowback from his employer, said he was a member of IG Metall and longtime SPD
voter.
But now, he
said, the party and the government under Scholz had abandoned the workers by
going “green, green, green,” sacrificing growth in the process. As a
consequence, he said he would vote for the AfD on Feb. 23.
“They killed
Germany,” he said of Scholz and his SPD-led government.
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