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- <text id=94TT1472>
- <title>
- Oct. 31, 1994: Germany:Confidence in Old King Kohl
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Oct. 31, 1994 New Hope for Public Schools
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- GERMANY, Page 42
- Confidence in Old King Kohl
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> Despite recession, high taxes and unemployment, the architect
- of unification wins four more years
- </p>
- <p>By Bruce W. Nelan--Reported by Bruce van Voorst/Bonn, with other bureaus
- </p>
- <p> Helmut Kohl and Germany look like a good physical match: the
- tall, burly Chancellor casts as large a political shadow at
- home as his powerful country does across the European Continent.
- While Kohl needed a lot of help from his coalition partners
- to win a fourth straight four-year term last week, he was the
- real issue of the campaign. Some posters carried only his portrait,
- without bothering to mention his name or that of his Christian
- Democratic Party. Unfazed when popularity polls showed him trailing
- 11% early this year, he insisted he would still win the national
- election. As his prediction came true, he smiled and asked,
- "What more could I have hoped for?"
- </p>
- <p> Well, possibly a larger majority. He and his partners from the
- Christian Social Union and the Free Democratic Party will control
- the new 672-member Bundestag by only 10 seats--a drop of 124
- from four years ago. No one has forgotten how swiftly and confidently
- Kohl engineered Germany's unification, but this electoral decline
- is about what has happened since then. It marks the price he
- paid for a steep post-union recession, now ending, and the resentment
- felt in both eastern and western Germany over the high cost
- of bringing them together. Even so, unified Germany stuck with
- Kohl's leadership.
- </p>
- <p> In the capitals of Europe and in Washington as well, that was
- excellent news. Demonstrations of continuity and stability are
- particularly welcomed from Germany, the colossus of Western
- Europe and the world's No. 3 industrial economy. Most of Germany's
- neighbors were at least a bit apprehensive about how the country
- would behave after coming triumphantly together five years ago,
- but Kohl's administration has reassured them. "Germany is not
- what it was in the past," says a French government official
- in Paris. German neo-Nazis have committed shocking public atrocities,
- but they do not presage a national trend toward extremism. An
- important proof: the far-right Republican Party took only 1.9%
- of last week's vote.
- </p>
- <p> One criticism Germany's neighbors sometimes make about Kohl
- is that he is preoccupied with domestic politics and lacks vision.
- But it seems an odd charge to lay against a man dedicated to
- expanding the Atlantic alliance and making the European Union
- live up to its name. "Germany," says a senior NATO official
- in Brussels, "is probably the only major country that is whole-heartedly
- committed to both NATO and the European Union." Germans must
- realize, Kohl said last week, that their new unity "will be
- wasted if we don't press ahead in parallel with European unity."
- </p>
- <p> Kohl wants to see Germany so embedded in European institutions
- that it will never again be tempted to swing its weight alone.
- He is so eager to create a common currency and a common foreign
- policy that he is willing to do so in a two-tier union, with
- an inner core of those ready to move forward by the end of this
- decade and an outer ring of those not financially or politically
- ready.
- </p>
- <p> Similarly, Kohl likes NATO so much he wants to see it grow bigger.
- He is uncomfortable with Germany's exposed position on the frontier
- between the solidity of NATO and the uncertainty of what used
- to be the Warsaw Pact. He would like to move NATO's border east,
- embracing Poland, Hungary, the Czech Republic and Slovakia,
- even in the face of vehement opposition from Russia. On that
- score he may face Washington's displeasure too, even if Bill
- Clinton did say when he visited Germany last July, "I always
- agree with Helmut."
- </p>
- <p> The passion of Kohl's European dreams will not keep domestic
- problems from claiming much of his attention during what he
- says will be his last term in office. He will have to go on
- paying the bills, now up to $330 billion, for rebuilding the
- east without overburdening the country's highly taxed citizens.
- He must try to keep the economic recovery on track, bring down
- unemployment rates (running nearly 8% in the west and 14% in
- the east) and work with overpriced industry and unions to mend
- Germany's sagging productivity.
- </p>
- <p> The Social Democrats say they will not be cooperative: they
- vow to do their best to overturn the ruling coalition before
- its term is over. Though his party has lost the past four elections,
- Social Democratic leader Rudolf Scharping calls Kohl's alliance
- "a coalition of losers." Kohl did not seem worried last week.
- "A majority is a majority," he observed. Correct, and Helmut
- Schmidt, one of Germany's most effective Chancellors, governed
- for six years with an identical 10-seat margin. For that matter,
- Konrad Adenauer became Chancellor in 1949 by a majority of only
- one seat. Kohl is betting that he will be on hand two years
- from now to celebrate overtaking Adenauer's postwar record of
- 14 years in office.
- </p>
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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