Germans happy with Obama win, but still disagree on austerity
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| Berlin
There isn鈥檛 a single front page in Germany today that does not carry a picture of a triumphant Barack Obama and his family, and most newspapers do not hide their satisfaction about Obama鈥檚 reelection.
鈥America鈥檚 better half鈥 is the headline of the left-leaning Tageszeitung, 鈥淥bama raises new hope鈥 says Berliner Zeitung.
But there are hints too that Germany has certain expectations. 鈥淒o it again, but better鈥 reads the headline of Germany鈥檚 influential weekly Die Zeit.
If Germans could have voted for a US president, the elections would have been a foregone conclusion. A survey just before the elections by pollsters YouGov found that 85 percent would vote for Obama with only 4 percent in favor of Mitt Romney. Support for Obama is found in all age groups and across Germany鈥檚 social and political spectrum. The number of those who think that the president has done a good job so far is considerably lower though 鈥 around 60 percent.
The enthusiasm for Obama might seem surprising, given that the president did not meet a number of German expectations, says Johannes Thimm of the German Institute for International and Security Affairs in Berlin.
鈥淲hile Obama replaced the unilateral foreign policy of the Bush administration with a multilateral approach his focus was much more on the Asian-Pacific region,鈥 Mr. Thimm says.
Europe did not feature in the election campaign, and the German government was irritated by American insistence on a stimulus package to overcome the eurozone debt crisis when the official German cure was rigid austerity. Further, Obama did not manage to close the Guantanamo prison camp 鈥 an issue that Germans feel strongly about 鈥 and he intensified the drone attacks on insurgents in Afghanistan, again, a policy seen very critically in Germany.
On the other hand there is a lot of sympathy here with Obama鈥檚 social and economic objectives. Obamacare is to most Germans, who grew up with mandatory health insurance, a matter of obvious necessity. The president鈥檚 efforts to help the struggling US car manufacturers was applauded by German trade unionists and employers alike.
What remains to be seen though is whether Germans are still so fond of Obama when the president 鈥 in his efforts to sort out America鈥檚 budget and debt problems 鈥 tells Europe, and most of all Germany, to shoulder a bigger share of responsibility in solving political, financial, and military crises around the globe.
鈥淲e can鈥檛 say we didn鈥檛 ask for it,鈥 is the dry conclusion of Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung.