The watermelons of the German Green Party are looking to plant their sticky seeds in the hitherto stony soil of the East, the former DDR. We’ll see how that turns out.

Many thanks to JLH for translating this essay from Preußische Allgemeine Zeitung:

Lose the Know-It-All-Westerner Image

The elections in Central Germany are expected to be a breakthrough for the Greens in the East of the Republic. But the start was a distinct miss. The party leader himself, Robert Habeck, sent out a video message that dissed potential voters.

The Thuringian Greens put out a video by Habeck, in which he declared: “We are doing everything we can to make Thuringia a free, liberal, democratic state — an ecological state.” What followed, is what is called in “New German” (slang) a S***storm. Many people on the internet recalled that the Free State is presently governed by a red-red-green coalition. And there it was again — the image of the Greens as the party of the Besserwessis.[1]

The Greens are struggling in the East. So there is great deference to the autumn state elections in Brandenburg, Saxony and Thuringia. In the elections in the autumn of 2017, they reached five percent of second votes[2] in Brandenburg, and even less in Thuringia and Saxony. Nationally, at the moment, the Greens are experiencing an unexpected upswing. More than 20% in polls is no longer an exception. They had record successes in the Bavarian and Hesse state elections. In Central Germany, the party is stuck at six to eight percent. And in Mecklenburg-Pomerania, they dropped completely out of the legislature. Now the party leadership has decreed a course correction. They no longer want to be seen in the East as the party that lectures. According to a position paper by the national party leader: Thirty years after the Wall fell, they want to initiate a debate in the middle of Germany about coexistence, “openly, with empathy, respect and mutual interests,” and also about “tales of success, misunderstandings, hopes and aberrations”

In the 1990s, the party in the West “had little interest in the common future in Germany” says the paper. The party intends to correct the mistakes of the past. Party leader Annalena Baerbock recalls the fusion with the civil rightists at the time of the so-called Wende.[3] “The task before us is writing Alliance90[4] in capital letters in our name again.” But there are also substantial reasons that the Greens are struggling “over there.” Central Germans’ inclination for multicultural utopias is traditionally less developed than is true in the West. And ecological pipe dreams likewise have little appeal in the territory still shaped by four decades of the GDR.[5]

However, in a talk with Der Spiegel, the Federal Whip, Michael Kellner, notes still other reasons. The party had to rebuild completely after the so-called Wende. After the experiences with the SED,[6] party membership was taboo in the progressive spectrum in the East. “So we had very few members from the beginning,” says Kellner. Only a short while ago, there were only ten members in Frankfurt an der Oder.[7]. The party says it has reformed. “But there is doubt whether the East German voices in the Green coalition party are paid sufficient attention. Therefore, 2019 is a chance for us Greens in the coalition to correct our own failures,” says the party conference resolution.