Read Jessen & Richter (Eds.) Online
Authors: Voting for Hitler,Stalin; Elections Under 20th Century Dictatorships (2011)
20 “eine der schwersten und bedrückendsten Gewissensentscheidungen”, Evangelischer Bischof der Kirchenprovinz Sachsen, D. Müller, an Brüder im Amt, Reformationstag 1950, SAPMO-Bundesarchiv DY 30/ IV 2/14/16; cf. SED-Informationsbericht Kreis
Löbau, May 13, 1957, HStA Drd. 11864, No. IV/4/09.086; Leidholdt, CDU-
Vorsitzender, OV Lobenstein an KV Schleiz, August 5, 1950, ACDP II–209, 004/6.
21 SED report, District of Löbau, June 12, 1956, HStA Drd. 11864, No. IV/4/09.086.
22 e.g. Report SED-KL to SED-BL, May 13, 1957, HStA Drd. 11864, Nr IV/4/09.086.
23 Report “After the plebiscite of June 3rd, 1951” Strictly confidential, anon., archive ÖRK
213.13.155/1.
114
H E D W I G R I C H T E R
The Functions of State-socialist Elections
How could this election practice, which officially maintained liberal-
democratic regulations including competition, multiple party system or
ballot boxes, be explained? Obviously, the communists attributed totally
different functions to the elections than was the case in the Western de-
mocracies. Thereby, the propagated official functions of elections can be
distinguished from the informal ones.
Official Functions
In the GDR, as in most of the state-socialist regimes, three official func-
tions of the elections can be identified throughout all changes. The first
function, which comes as no surprise, serves the
legitimization of power
. Constitutions are, as “symbolic orders” (Vorländer 2006; cf. Rohe 1990, 329;
Häberle 1982) invariably also a form of public presentation. The concept
of elections in the GDR constitution was, not least because of this, aimed
at the Western democratic hemisphere, in order to legitimize itself in the
face of West Germany and abroad (Hahn 1988, 435).24 In practice, of
course, the state-socialist particularities had to be taken into consideration.
Legitimization could not mean winning over the majority in competition
with other ideas because of the monolithic ideology. Instead, a collective
endorsement of the Marxist-Leninist truth was sought after, in a kind of
acclamation of the ruling body. According to the argumentation of leading
communist thinkers, socialist countries did not need the incentive of com-
petitive elections, unlike capitalist countries, as the communist basis of the
society was generally approved; an East German social scientist explained:
“State and people are one in Socialism” (Eckler et al. 1975, 73). This key
phrase of the ideology should be confirmed in socialist elections. The au-
thorities could not offer up a doctrine of salvation for the people that
could be rejected by the people. Because of this, the regime could not do
without the high turnout and the high numbers of votes in favor.
The fundamental tension between the official election procedure and
dictatorial practice led to a kind of performative self-contradiction, as it
was the individual who voted, despite the function of collective acclama-
——————
24 Cf. HStA Drd. 11430, No. 10849, 10872 etc.
M A S S O B E D I E N C E
115
tion. This disparity impeded the degree to which the election generated
legitimacy. For many voters, the use of Western election techniques kept
the demands of an individual vote alive. In the discussions about elections,
the electorate indicated time and again that the Western model was an
obvious point of reference. Even for the state officials, the Federal Repub-
lic of Germany served as a model of comparison, as they constantly felt the
need to dismiss the West German electoral practice. A certain kind of
indifference, and often disgruntlement pervaded the population, even in
the decades in which the elections ran smoothly, as the individual act of
voting seemed pointless to many (Richter 2009a, 284). The flagrantly high
election results also did little to achieve the desired recognition from
abroad.25 In particular, the permanent comparison to Western standards
and the use of Western procedures meant that the potential for delegitimi-
zation was massive both at home and abroad (Ammer 1977).
The second official function of the elections was
mobilization
, which,
above all, manifested itself during the prolonged election campaigns men-
tioned above. The people were supposed to realize the advantages of the
system in which they lived and show their eagerness to put themselves out
for society. As an East German social scientist maintained, “the individuals
should commit themselves to the political and societal aims, as decided by
the Party” (Poppe 1959). Western political scientists describe this as a “so-
cial economic function” to increase production (Vogel et al. 1969, 16). In
the months leading up to the election, repair work, painting and other jobs
were carried out, everywhere. A GDR citizen described how, surprised by
the freshly painted door of the institute where she was working, she intui-
tively assumed that there must be elections coming up (Richter 2009a,
183–296).
A third official function was closely connected with the function of
mobilization in state-socialism: elections served the
relaying of utopia.
They were supposed to bring the ultimate goal of the communist ideal society
closer to the people. For that reason, it was necessary, during election time
in particular, to strengthen the unity of state and citizens and to make more
apparent the aims of communist politics (Feddersen 1965, 46). In this
respect, it is understandable why the state-socialists staged the elections as
a festive event. According to Jan Assmann the festival lights up “the back-
ground of our being, faded in the everyday”. During festivities, the collec-
——————
25 HStA Drd. 11430, No. 10849 and 10872.
116
H E D W I G R I C H T E R
tive identity, which needs celebration and a break from everyday life, can
be assured (Assman 2005, 53 and 57). The festival was supposed to repre-
sent the societal canon of values. Thus, the elections under state-socialism
had to be a festival of consensus and uniformity; they drew the individual
into line with the collective. The Czech social scientist Jiří Hronek ex-
plained in 1954 that the election campaigns revealed the deeper meaning of
the socialist concept of society. The point was “to create a sustainable
relationship” between governed and governing and to mobilize the citizens
through discussions and self-commitment (Hronek 1954). The exceptional
importance of election campaigns in many dictatorships and thereby the
relativization of the voting act in relation to this refers to a fundamentally
different understanding of elections: elections, not as an individual act of
sovereignty and decision, but rather a festive period to represent unity—
the deeper sense of society, in which the collective sought to reach the
ultimate communist goal.
However, the performance failed. Although the majority of people
voted, hardly any GDR citizen felt in high spirits. Election day turned out
to be both a perverse celebration and day-to-day life; with its absurd collec-
tivist rhetoric, the forced disregard of the individual and the demands to
pay lip service it smothered the claimed celebratory atmosphere, despite all
festivities. The performative self-contradiction—the insistence on the
individual vote whilst adhering to the function of acclamation—delegiti-
mized the elections all too clearly. It was totally different to the National
Socialist elections, in which a majority of the population actually voted in a
celebratory manner and gave the “Führer” their “yes” vote (Urban 2011, in
this volume).
Unofficial Electoral Functions
The individual act of voting, however, offered the state an opportunity,
which it knew how to exploit strategically. The almost one hundred per
cent participation in the election ritual served as a powerful symbol: each
person had to submit. The first unofficial function, then, is the
subjugation
of the citizens of the GDR. Even people who were critical of the regime
explained in hindsight that they went to vote because they did not want to
separate themselves or stand apart from society (Richter 2009a, 283–295).
The historian and sociologist, Jan T. Gross, interprets the elections in East
M A S S O B E D I E N C E
117
Poland, described at the beginning of this text, as an attunement to the
communist dictatorship, as a humiliation of the population and as a con-
struction of a kind of complicity with the regime (Gross 1986, 29; cf. also
the contribution by Merl in this volume). By means of the individual vote,
the elections made it possible to separate the disciplined supporters of the
collective from those dissenters who deviated from the norm, to reward
the former and to punish the latter.26 The anthropologist Alexei Yurchak
wrote about the seemingly senseless collective acts in communism such as
elections: “Participating in these acts reproduced oneself as a ‘normal’ So-
viet person” (Yurchak 2006, 25). Non-participation meant the refusal to
submit to the collective and in doing so one became “unacceptable”. The
voting procedure created realities, because the performative act made visi-
ble consent and submission, particularly as in the GDR, as in most other
state-socialist countries, voting was not officially compulsory. The willing-
ness to obey, essential for every form of domination, grounded in the be-
lief in legitimism of which Max Weber has spoken, found its expression