Politician Expelled
February 18, 2008Christel Wegner has been expelled from the Left party's parliamentary group in Lower Saxony after winning a seat in the state's parliament last month, the party said on Monday.
In a statement, the party said the views she expressed in an interview with TV station ARD last week were "unacceptable."
"We can never again have a socialism without the rule of law, democracy and freedom to travel," the party said.
Wegner, 60, a member of the German Communist Party (DKP) and a parliamentary representative of the Left party in Lower Saxony, came under fire from all sides last week after advocating the return of former East Germany's dreaded secret police.
"I think that if a new society was created, we would need such an organization [like the Stasi] again, because we would have to protect ourselves against reactionary forces trying to weaken the state from within," she said on Thursday in an interview with Germany's ARD television broadcaster.
She also said that the Berlin Wall, which divided the city from 1961 to 1989, needed to be built in order to protect the East German economy from West Germans who wanted to cross the border to buy cheap goods.
Left condemns GDR practices
The Left party, a new alliance comprised mainly of ex-communists and disaffected former Social Democrats, quickly moved to disapprove of Wegner, who was elected to Lower Saxony's parliament last month on the party's platform.
"We reject all forms of dictatorship and condemn Stalinism as a criminal abuse of socialism," said the party in a statement.
Gregor Gysi, party chair in the federal parliament, criticized the state party organizations that put candidates from the Communist Party on their election tickets.
"We're not going back to the GDR," he added, referring to former communist East Germany, known as the German Democratic Republic.
Wegner urged to step down
Members of Germany's center and conservative parties were quick to pass judgment on the Left party, with some calling for Wegner's resignation.
"The first Left party parliamentarians are letting their masks fall after the state elections," said David McAllister, the Christian Democrat's party chief in Lower Saxony, who also appealed to Wegner to step down.
"Now the Left party has shown its true face," commented Philipp Roesler, head of the liberal Free Democratic Party (FDP) in Lower Saxony.
Founded in 2007 by former German Finance Minister Oskar Lafontaine, the Left is seen as a rising political force and a potential threat to the center-left Social Democratic Party. In the state elections on Jan. 27, it entered Lower Saxony's parliament for the first time with 7.1 percent of the vote and six seats.