Oskar Lafontaine (born September 16, 1943 in Saarlouis-Roden) is a left-wing German politician and a leading member of the Left Party. He is of French descent.
Lafontaine's views and remarks have made him a polarizing figure in German politics; most Germans are either fond of his politics or disdain them. Some have compared Lafontaine to Edmund Stoiber; both are close to the fringes of the German political mainstream, but come from opposite ends of the political spectrum.
Political rise
He rose to prominence locally as mayor of
Saarbrücken and became known more widely known as a critic of
chancellor Helmut Schmidt's support for the
NATO plan to deploy
Pershing II missiles in Germany. From
1985 to
1998 he served as prime minister of the
Saarland. In this position he struggled to conserve the industrial base of this state which was based on
steel production and
coal mining with
subsidies.
Chancellor candidacy
In the
German federal election of 1990, he was the SPD's Chancellor candidate. The party was defeated due to the national euphoria following the
reunification. During the campaign he was attacked with a knife by a mentally deranged woman after a speech in
Cologne. His
carotid artery was slashed and he remained in a critical condition for several days.
Political comeback
At the "
Mannheim convention" in
1995, he was elected chairman of the SPD in a surprise move, replacing
Rudolf Scharping. He was mainly responsible for bringing the whole political weight of the SPD to bear against
Helmut Kohl and his
CDU party, rejecting bipartisan cooperation that had characterized German politics for many years. Lafontaine argued that any help given to Kohl would only lengthen his unavoidable demise.
After this strategy gave the SPD an unexpectedly clear victory at the polls in September 1998, he was appointed Federal Minister of Finance in the first government of Gerhard Schröder.
Minister of Finance
During his short tenure as Minister of Finance, Lafontaine was a main
bogeyman of UK
Eurosceptics, because among other things he had called for the prompt
tax harmonisation of the
European Union, the result of which would have been an increase in UK taxes. On
March 11,
1999, he resigned from all his official and party offices, claiming
"lack of cooperation" in the cabinet had become unbearable. More recently, he has become known for his attacks against the current German government in the
tabloid Bild-Zeitung which is generally considered
right wing .
Leaving the SPD/Formation of the Left Party
On
May 24,
2005 Lafontaine left the SPD. After two weeks of speculation it was announced on
June 10 that he would run as the lead candidate for the
Left Party (Die Linkspartei), a coalition of the
Labor and Social Justice Party (WASG), which is based in western Germany, and the
Party of Democratic Socialism (PDS) , which is the successor to the
East German communist party
*. He joined the WASG on
June 18,
2005 and was selected to head their list for the
2005 Federal Election in
North Rhine-Westphalia on the same day. Moreover he also unsuccessfully contested the
Saarbrücken constituency . Nevertheless the result of the Linkspartei in the Saarland was by far the best in any of the federal states in the West of Germany.
Criticisms of Lafontaine
An article by Lafontaine on
Erich Honecker, state and party leader of the
GDR and a Saarländer like him, in the
magazine Der Spiegel was criticised as laudatory by many observers. In the late 80s and early 90s he tarnished his left wing credentials with a plea for pro-business policies and a call for the reduction of the influx of Germans from Eastern Europe and
asylum-seekers.
In 1993 the press reported alleged contacts of Lafontaine to the red-light milieu of Saarbrücken. This motivated him to formulate the most repressive press law of all the German länder.
Education and private life
He studied
physics at the University of
Saarbrücken and from
1974 to
1985.
Lafontaine is married to Christa Müller who leads a campaign against genital mutiliation in Africa. They have a son, Carl Maurice, born 1997.
External links
1943 births | Living people | German politicians | Members of the German Bundestag | German ministers | Natives of Saarland
Oskar Lafontaine | Oskar Lafontaine | Όσκαρ Λαφοντέν | Oskar Lafontaine | Oskar Lafontaine | Oskar Lafontaine | Oskaras Lafontenas | Oskar Lafontaine | Oskar Lafontaine | オスカー・ラフォンテーヌ | Oskar Lafontaine | Oskar Lafontaine | Oskar Lafontaine | Oskar Lafontaine