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GERMAN ELECTIONS TO USHER IN A NEW POLITICAL ERA

Today’s election will demonstrat­e whether Scholz’s approach resonates with voters, many of whom have abandoned the mainstream parties of the postwar period

- BY NATHAN GARDELS — Global Viewpoint ■ Nathan Gardels is editor-in-chief of the Global Viewpoint Network and Noema Magazine.

The prospects for Olaf Scholz, the Social Democratic Party’s candidate for chancellor in the coming German election, are looking up because he has stopped looking down.

His poll numbers are climbing the more he abandons the elite rhetoric of fierce competitio­n in the flat world of globalisat­ion that champions the sophistica­tes who dominate cosmopolit­an culture industries and the cult of canny entreprene­urs whose algorithms scale them up to unicorns overnight, mythically making it to the top through nothing other than their singular genius and clever marketing moves.

The imputation is that those who merely work with their hands and hearts to make the daily world turn — the very store clerks, elderly caretakers, waiters, janitors, meat-cutters, supply packagers, delivery drivers and others on the front line of the Covid-19 battle — are secondclas­s citizens, if not slackers and losers who deserve low pay and lowly regard as proper compensati­on for their lack of ambition and college credential­s.

When such constituen­cies actively resent this demotion of their dignity, they are cast into Hillary Clinton’s condescend­ant category of “deplorable­s.” Perhaps more than anything else, this rift in the social status-sphere is what roils politics across Western democracie­s today.

Understand­ing this, Scholz has sought to reverse the implicit disdain for average workers and pledged to restore a society that respects their dignity and compensate­s them for their real value upon which the success of all others is built.

Scholz has sought to reverse the implicit disdain for average workers and pledged to restore a society that respects their dignity and compensate­s them for their real value upon which the success of all others is built.

The Tyranny of Merit

Scholz’s political message is informed by his reading of philosophe­r Michael Sandel’s 2020 book, The Tyranny of Merit.” Sandel’s use of the word “merit” is unfortunat­e since it can mean nothing more than the knowledge and experience to do something with competence. He deploys the term instead to disparage what he calls the “rhetoric of the rising” used by the “profession­al classes” who dominated the centre-left politics of the Tony Blair and Barack Obama era.

Their mantra was that the best route to success in a relentless­ly competitiv­e world was for the individual to aggressive­ly strive for the highest grades and prestigiou­s credential­s, especially from the most elite schools, in order to access the top law or financial firms, or as an entree into the universe of high-tech start-ups promising to richly reward their entreprene­urial swagger.

The best would scale the heights. When success came, it was due to nothing other than making it on their own “merit.” “Then those who rise by dint of effort, talent, hard work, will deserve their place, will have earned it,” says Sandel. “The implicatio­n is that those who do not rise will have no one to blame but themselves.”

In Sandel’s reading, this patronisin­g blame on the un-rising is the root of the populist revolt. Scholz agrees. And that is what he is trying to uproot in German politics.

“Why did Britain vote for Brexit if it was against its own interest?” he asks. “Why did America vote for Trump? I believe it is because people are experienci­ng deep social insecuriti­es, and lack appreciati­on for what they do. … We see the same dissatisfa­ction and insecurity not just in the US or the UK but in the Netherland­s, Sweden, Denmark, Finland, Norway, Austria or Germany. … Among certain profession­al classes, there is a meritocrat­ic exuberance that has led people to believe their success is completely self-made. As a result, those who actually keep the show on the road don’t get the respect they deserve. That has to change.”

Self-serving ideology

Scholz wants to replace the self-serving ideology of “merit” with one of societal “respect,” calling out the hypocritic­al “applause” for front-line workers during the pandemic so far unaccompan­ied by any commensura­te revaluatio­n of their economic worth. He has pledged to start heading down that path with a 12 euros per hour minimum wage in his first year in office if elected, something that has long been resisted in Germany. Scholz has also pledged to preserve and invigorate the country’s apprentice­ship programs for small and medium size industries, which are the backbone of its manufactur­ing strength and workingcla­ss employment, while loosening fiscal strictures that inhibit investment and spending that would boost the fortunes of those who labour in the basic service economy.

The election on Sep. 26 will demonstrat­e whether Scholz’s approach resonates with voters, many of whom have abandoned the mainstream parties of the postwar period. More than any set of policies, his crusade for “respect” that would stamp the dignity of recognitio­n on every level of society would go a good distance in stemming the animus of resentment that fuels anti-elite populism.

A struggle for recognitio­n

Hegel long ago understood that since identity is establishe­d inter-subjective­ly, the lack of recognitio­n by others would lead to “a struggle for recognitio­n,” such as we have seen in recent years not only in the white working class precincts of the rusting belt but also in its symbiotic twin of race and gender identity politics that have seized university campuses.

Neither, of course, is a self-contained phenomenon, but cut across other life experience­s that ultimately define a person’s place in the world. They may even align now and again along the anti-authoritar­ian or libertaria­n axis they sometimes share.

What has sustained faith in all the great religions over millennia is precisely the spirit — if not always its practice — of inclusivit­y in which none is privileged and every believer is equally valued in the eyes of their God.

If Scholz can lead the way in fostering that same dignity of recognitio­n in political life, there is some hope of escaping the struggle for it that is ripping contempora­ry societies apart.

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