In the 1980s and 1990s, a conflict between the Fundis and the Realos with the German Green Party arose. While the Realos, the group around
Joschka Fischer, were in favour of
cabinet cooperation, the Fundis opposed cabinet cooperation. The Fundis were composed of deep greens and
eco-socialists. They did not only oppose cabinet cooperation, but were also in favour of strict
term limits. In addition to disagreements on party business, the conflict can be traced to ideological disputes. While the Realos were in favour of moderate policies and the notion of '
sustainable growth'–regulated economic growth within the limits of ecological sustainability–the Fundis took a more radical stance in dismissing the notion of economic growth altogether, seeing it as necessarily polluting. The term was first used within the
Hessen Green party. In the 1982 state elections the party gained 8% of vote, and neither the
SPD or the
CDU had a majority of their own. In their program Hessen Greens had claimed that there was a "fundamental opposition between the anti-life and anti-democratic politics of the SPD, CDU and FDP." Those who had opposed a coalition with the SPD were called Fundis. The Greens tolerated an SPD-
minority government for three years and in 1985 they entered the coalition, a victory for the Realos. Joschka Fischer became their minister. During the party congress on 22–23 June 1985 in Hagen, the Realos won a victory on the federal level when they adopted a motion, saying that the Greens could "use the full bandwidth of parliamentary possibilities, ranging from opposition to single-party government". At the end of the 1980s the Fundis founded the Left Forum. In 1990 a group of prominent eco-socialists left the party, in 1991 a group of deep greens also left. Some of those joined the
PDS and others founded their own party. In 1998 the Greens joined the federal cabinet, a final victory for the Realos. In the following years the division between realos and Fundis became less important. ==Other uses==