6 - Left Without Its Party: OKV Attempts at Linkage
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 21 November 2020
Summary
Abstract
Chapter 6 analyzes the OKV's political and social ties, and in particular its difficult relation to Die Linke, Germany's major radical left party that emerged as an indirect successor of the GDR's Socialist Unity Party (SED). While in GDR times the Stasi understood itself as the protector of the SED, by 1990 the party (then called PDS) began to reform itself, distancing itself from the former Stasi. Today a bridge between Die Linke and “unreformed” former SED and Stasi cadres within the OKV is Hans Modrow, who claims to stand up for a GDR identity against an ongoing Westernization within Die Linke. At OKV congresses, members discuss whether the DKP, another radical left party, would be more helpful as the OKV's political partner.
Keywords: Die Linke, PDS, DKP, ideology, postsocialism, political cleavages, Hans Modrow
It has been widely recognized that the past has a tremendous impact upon political attitudes in the present. Accordingly, differences between people's attitudes toward “the left” in Eastern and Western Europe are usually explained by the effects of socialization on political preferences and people's understanding of the left-right ideological scale, as well as by country-specific post-socialist economic performances and the political role of former ruling parties in the new political landscape. The positive OKV memory of the GDR, and its rejection of social and political conditions in unified Germany, are a clear case in point.
The previous chapters studied OKV as a conglomerate of organizations united by their memory culture and their political habitus which, with some adaptations, reproduces GDR understandings of politics and patterns of action. In this chapter we will look at OKV as a part of the all-German political spectrum, and in particular at their attempts to link up with other leftist groups and parties, especially with Germany's most prominent radical left party, Die Linke, which grew out of the GDR's ruling party, SED (Sozialistische Einheitspartei Deutschlands). Although the OKV officially claims to be nonpartisan, all associated organizations understand the OKV as being radical left in outlook. OKV members whom I interviewed stated their support for radical left parties, of which many of them are members.
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- German Post-Socialist Memory CultureEpistemic Nostalgia, pp. 237 - 266Publisher: Amsterdam University PressPrint publication year: 2019