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25 Sep 2020, 14:04
Jessica Bateman

Fridays for Future movement gears up for German election year with protest

Photo shows fridays for future climate strike in Berlin on 25 September 2020. Photo: 威力彩玩法/Jessica Bateman.
Photo: Jessica Bateman.

With numerous protests across Germany, the Fridays for Future youth movement has taken aim at pushing climate action to the very top of the political agenda in the run-up to the country's general elections next year. The activists don't want to side with any party and instead plan to put pressure on politicians across the spectrum to act according to the Paris Agreement, a spokesperson told 威力彩玩法. But some of the movement's prominent members are running for a seat in parliament as members of the Green Party, leading to splits in the movement.

Germany's Fridays for Future movement has staged hundreds of protests across the country to ensure that climate action will be a key issue in the country's election one year from now. The protests are part of the first global Fridays for Future action this year.

The movement has announced strikes in 35,000 locations around the world, with over 400 planned in Germany alone. In Germany's capital Berlin, the activists staged protests in three separate actions 鈥 a sit-in at the iconic Brandenburg Gate, a march, and a critical mass bike ride past parliament buildings.

Participant numbers at mid-day were lower than expected. According to police, initial estimates put the number of people in the city centre at around 2000, . These numbers are a far cry from one year ago, when a global climate strike almost 300,000 people in Berlin alone, according to organizers.

At Brandenburg Gate, people joined in with the sit-down protest wearing masks and observing social distancing rules. They chanted 'Power to the people, cos the people got the power!' and 'We are here! We are loud!'"

20-year-old Hanna and her friend Stine, 21, say they were regular attendees at previous strikes. 鈥淚 think it鈥檚 great that they kept the movement going [throughout lockdown], I think they鈥檝e done really well,鈥 said Hanna. Both say they hope politicians will propose more radical climate policies in the run-up to the election. 鈥淎t the moment it just seems like it鈥檚 all talk,鈥 she adds. The atmosphere at the Berlin protest appeared slightly subdued, as it coincided with heavy rains.

Actions have been designed to adhere to social distancing guidelines 鈥 a strategy organisers say is important, given the movement's calls for following scientific guidelines. Fridays for Future Berlin spokesperson Quang Anh Paasch adds that a sit-down protest is planned to ensure safe distances between participants.

The current economy minister Peter Altmaier, a member of Chancellor Angela Merkel's CDU who earlier this month called for a "historic" consensus on climate change, said that he 鈥溾 the protests in an interview with public broadcaster Dlf. "Global warming doesn't take a break," he said in , adding that "we can and must become better 鈥 a climate neutral, economically powerful and social Europe must be the target across parties." But Jochen Flasbarth, a social democrat and state secretary in the environment ministry, that "climate protection is a central task of our time. It cannot be solved by abstract pacts in a last-minute panic before elections."

Photo shows fridays for future climate strike in Berlin on 25 September 2020. Photo: Jessica Bateman.
20-year-old Hanna and her friend Stine, 21, say they have been regular attendees at the climate strikes. Photo: Jessica Bateman.

Preparing for a watershed moment

Next year鈥檚 elections mark a watershed moment in German politics. Chancellor Angela Merkel, whose approval ratings have soared to over 70 percent during the pandemic, will be stepping down, and it is not yet clear who her successor will be. The current ruling Christian Democrats (CDU) and Social Democrats (SPD) have made it clear they are unwilling to continue their coalition.

Paasch says Fridays for Future doesn鈥檛 intend to side with any party, and will instead be calling on the CDU, SPD, the Greens, the Left and the economic liberal Free Democrats (FDP) to create policy proposals in line with the 2015 Paris Agreement.

The activists claim that 鈥渘ot even the Green Party鈥 is conforming to the targets laid out in the Paris Agreement. However, some members of Friday for Future are also Green Party members, which has led to splits in the movement. Some prominent members, such as Jakob Blasel, a spokesperson for the organisation, are even running for a seat in Germany鈥檚 parliament.

A recent survey found more than 90 percent of Germans say climate change has remained just as or even more important to them since the start of the pandemic, meaning it is likely to be a key issue shaping election policy. The Green Party, which is currently polling at 19 percent, is likely to benefit from this, and show the distinct possibility of a CDU-Green coalition. As well as Altmaier鈥檚 call for consensus, which is seen by many as an olive branch from the CDU politician to the Greens, the current coalition has recently announced a major climate policy package. This includes the coal exit, a CO2 price for transport and heating fuels, and a national climate law.

Although this all may sound like good news from the activists鈥 point of view, Fridays for Future says it still wants political parties to adopt much stronger stances. Paasch says he believes politicians need to give the same energy to the climate crisis as they have the coronavirus pandemic. 鈥淭he [current government] doesn鈥檛 really seem to take the science on climate change as seriously as it does with the coronavirus and biology, which is interesting and bizarre to us at the same time,鈥 he says. He gives the example of French President Emmanuel Macron鈥檚 insistence that Air France must cut its emissions in order to receive state financial support as the type of action the movement would like to see in Germany. "We didn鈥檛 see anything like that, in Germany they just gave the money away with no environmental conditions. Most politicians seem to think the climate crisis is something to deal with later on in the future, and I think that鈥檚 very dangerous. When we are spending money and making changes, we need to think of the different crises all together.鈥

Germany is currently on track to meet its original target of reducing greenhouse gas emissions by 40 percent between 1990 and 2020, but this is in part due to the reduction in energy demand caused by the lockdown. Activists fear that emissions could jump up once the pandemic is over, unless action is taken now.

No strategy yet for election count-down

When the lockdown was first announced in March, Fridays for Future cancelled all its in-person actions and moved its activism online, which Paasch admits was 鈥渒ind of hard鈥 for a street-based movement. Digital activism didn鈥檛 engage people as much as the protests had 鈥 one survey found that only six percent of teenagers had taken part in an online strike, compared to nearly a third who had been to a physical Fridays for Future action. "It was very challenging dealing with school, university and with our mental health," he continues. "But I would say that now there are less restrictions people are coming back, and new people are coming to us. It鈥檚 getting better."

The ongoing pandemic and its potential for fast-changing restrictions also means it is difficult for the movement to plan far ahead, and it does not yet have a strategy for how it will approach the election count-down. 鈥淲e can only plan a month in advance as it鈥檚 kind of hard right now,鈥 Paasch says. 鈥淲e will see how this strike goes 鈥 maybe it will be a disaster and we will have to go back online, or maybe we can stay on the streets.鈥

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