15 candidates in their 20's and 30's, running as the Pirate Party, shocked Germany by winning 8.9% of the vote and all 15 legislative seats in Berlin on an Internet Freedom Platform. The party closely overlaps with the Chaos Computer Club, a Berlin hackers collective. The party's lead candidate commented for the NY Times: "The very fact that these other parties are now asking themselves how we won these votes is already progress"
More coverage from the NY Times: BERLIN
— With laptops open like shields against the encroaching cameramen, the
young men resembled Peter Pan’s Lost Boys more than Captain Hook’s
buccaneers when they were introduced Monday as Berlin’s newest
legislators: They are the members of the Pirate Party.
Asked if they were just some chaotic troop of troublemakers, Christopher
Lauer, newly voted in as a state lawmaker for the district of Pankow,
replied with no lack of confidence, “You ought to wait for the first
session in the house of representatives.”
By winning 8.9 percent of the vote in Sunday’s election in this
city-state, these political pirates surpassed — blew away, really —
every expectation for what was supposed to be a fringe, one-issue party
promoting Internet freedom. The Pirates so outstripped expectations that
all 15 candidates on their list won seats — seats are doled out based
in part on votes for a party rather than for an individual. Normally
parties list far more candidates than could ever make it, because if
they win more than they nominate, the seat must remain unfilled.
These men in their 20s and 30s, who turned up at the imposing former
Prussian state parliament building, some wearing hooded sweatshirts, and
one a T-shirt of the comic book hero Captain America, were no longer
merely madcap campaigners and gadflies. They had become the people’s
elected representatives.
The question that members of Germany’s political establishment are now
asking after the insurgent party stormed the statehouse is this: Are the
Pirates merely the punch line to a joke, a focus of protest, a
reflection of electoral disgust with all established political parties —
or an exciting experiment in a new form of online democracy?
“They are absolutely not a joke party,” said Christoph Bieber <http://nrwschool.de/xd/public/content/index.html?pid=726>
, a professor of political science at the University of Duisburg-Essen.
While there was certainly an element of protest in the unexpectedly
large share of the votes the Pirates won, they were filling a real need
for voters outside the political mainstream who felt unrepresented. “In
the Internet, they have really found an underexploited theme that the
other political parties are not dealing with,” Mr. Bieber said.
The state election in Berlin on Sunday was full of surprising results.
The pro-business Free Democrats, Chancellor Angela Merkel’s coalition
partners in the federal Parliament, crashed and burned, again, receiving
less than 2 percent of the vote. That is well below the 5 percent
needed to remain in the statehouse. The Green Party continued to build
on its recent successes and may well become one of the governing parties
in Berlin. While issues like online privacy and data
protection may seem incredibly narrow, even irrelevant, to older
voters, for young people who often spend half their waking hours online,
much of it on social networking sites where they share their most
intimate moments, it is anything but a small issue. And the Pirates’
call for complete transparency in politics resonates powerfully with a
generation disillusioned by the American case for war in Iraq and
galvanized by WikiLeaks’ promise to put an end to secrecy.
The Pirates’ surprisingly strong showing came as further evidence of
voter dissatisfaction in Germany with the established parties, and what
many see as their inability to look beyond self-interest and focus
instead on the needs of their constituents. The Pirates have promised to
use online tools to give party members unprecedented power to propose
policies and determine stances, in what they call “liquid democracy,” a
form of participation that goes beyond simply voting in elections.
The party has broadened its initial platform, which focused on file
sharing, censorship and data protection to include other social issues,
advocating the Internet as a tool to empower the electorate and engage
it in the political — and legislative — process.
“Today’s cadre of politicians is missing out on asking some very
relevant questions about the future,” said Rick Falkvinge, founder of
the first Pirate Party, which he started in Sweden in 2006. He was
celebrating with his German colleagues at Sunday night’s election party
in a room filled with disco balls and disassembled mannequins in the
Kreuzberg nightclub Ritter Butzke <http://www.ritterbutzke.de/>
. Thanks to the interactive nature of the Internet, “you don’t have to
take these laws being read to you,” he said. “You can stand up, stand
tall and write the laws yourself.”
Mr. Falkvinge summed up the significance of the Berlin election for the
nascent movement in terms members would understand: “German Pirates have
the high score now.”
Sebastian Schneider, who asked to be called Schmiddie “or no one will
know who you’re talking about,” a member of the party and one of the
people celebrating Sunday night, said that there was no other party he
could envision voting for.
“In my opinion, the Greens are a conservative party by now,” Mr.
Schneider said. “They were not quite sure if they wanted to join the
dark side of the force or not,” by which he said that he meant forming a
coalition to govern Berlin with Mrs. Merkel’s Christian Democrats.
There were plenty of young people, many with dreadlocks or beards and a
few with both, smoking hand-rolled cigarettes and sipping beer. Others
wore jackets with CCC written on the back, short for the Chaos Computer
Club, a hackers’ collective that got its start in Berlin and has an
overlap in membership with the Pirates. A stand-up comedian working in
classic Berlin cabaret style poked fun at the influx of tourists and the
recent rent increases that became major issues in the election
campaign, saying: “There are no more buildings to occupy. Next we’ll
have to start occupying five-star hotels.”
Mayor Klaus Wowereit of Berlin, whose Social Democrats won the most
votes on Sunday, assuring him a third term as the city’s mayor, may have
paid the young party the highest compliment of all, taking it seriously
enough to attack the day after the election. He raised a prickly
problem for young men who spend their evenings writing computer code:
There were next to no women in their group.
“Gender politics has not arrived for the Pirates yet, and that is not a
step forward but a step backward,” Mr. Wowereit told reporters Monday.
Indeed, at Monday’s news conference only young, white men sat at the
conference table representing the party. Mr. Lauer, himself wearing a
sports jacket, said that the mostly scruffy people were “not a
representative slice of this society,” and that it was a problem that
the party was working on.
The Pirates could be disarmingly honest, and were unfailingly polite to
security guards, cameramen and anyone else they came across.
Transparency in politics means “also being able to admit when we don’t
know something,” said Andreas Baum, the party’s lead candidate in the
election.
Asked what kind of real change a small party in a state legislature
could really bring about, Mr. Baum replied, “The very fact that these
other parties are now asking themselves how we won these votes is
already progress.”
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