In the 1998 Bundestag election campaign, Gerhard Schröder (SPD) had
promised effective measures against unemployment, and in his first
policy statement to the Bundestag, he announced that higher employment
rates and job creation would be the measure of his government. While the
jobless rate indeed declined between 1999 and 2001, it rose thereafter
as a result of the recession. In light of this, on March 1, 2005, CDU
general secretary Volker Kauder (left) and CSU general secretary Markus
Söder unveiled a large poster that called attention to the high
unemployment level and attacked Schröder as “the chancellor of mass
unemployment.” They failed to mention, however, that the rapid (and
temporary) jump in unemployment to over 5 million was partially caused
by a change in statistical practices in early 2005. With the
implementation of the Hartz IV Law, hundreds of thousands of people who
had previously been classified as welfare recipients were registered as
unemployed.
The CDU/CSU Holds Chancellor Schröder Responsible for Mass Unemployment (March 1, 2005)