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Elections in Germany

From Biocrawler, the free encyclopedia.

Germany: Coat of Arms
This article is part of the series
Politics of Germany
Basic Law
Bundestag
Bundesrat
Federal Convention
Constitutional Court
President
Chancellor
Cabinet
States of Germany
Districts of Germany
Elections

Political Parties
Pre-1945 parties
Former GDR parties

Elections in Germany gives information on election and election results in Germany, including elections to the Federal Diet (the lower house of the federal parliament), the Landtage of the various states, and local elections.

Contents

Federal elections

Germany elects on federal level a legislature. The parliament has two chambers. The Federal Diet (Bundestag) has 603 members, elected for a four year term, 299 members elected in single-seat constituencies according to first-past-the-post, while a further 299 members are allocated from statewide party lists to achieve a proportional distribution in the legislature, conducted according to a system of proportional representation called the additional member system. Voters vote once for a constituency representative, and a second time for a party, and the lists are used to make the party balances match the distribution of second votes. Germany has a multi-party system, with two strong parties and some other third parties that are electorally successful.

Elections are conducted every 4 years, with the exact date of the election chosen by the outgoing government. The Bundestag can be dismissed and a new election called before the four year period has ended, but this usually only occurs in the case of a government losing its majority. The next federal election is due some time in the fall of 2006. Early in 2004, speculation was rife that CDU victories at the state level would give them a blocking supermajority in the Bundesrat and force SPD chancellor Gerhard Schröder to call an early election, but this began to look less likely. However, following the loss of the region of North Rhine/Westphalia to the CDU, an SDP stronghold for 39 years, Gerhard Schröder has decided to call an election this autumn, as his party no longer has enough seats in the upper house of parliament to govern effectively. This raises the possibility that Angela Merkel, the CDU leader, will become Germany's first female chancellor.

German nationals over the age of 18 are eligible to vote, including most Germans resident outside Germany, and eligibility for candidacy is essentially the same as eligibility to vote.

The Federal Council (Bundesrat) has 69 members representing the governments of the states.

Federal election results

State elections

State elections are conducted under various rules set by the Länder. In general they are conducted according to some form of party list proportional repesentation, either the same as the federal system or some simplified version. The election period is generally four to five years, and the dates of elections vary from state to state.

Baden-Württemberg state election results

Bavaria state election results

Berlin state election results

Brandenburg state election results

Bremen state election results

Hamburg state election results

Hessen state election results

Lower Saxony state election results

Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania state election results

North Rhine-Westphalia state election results

Rhineland-Palatinate state election results

Saarland state election results

Saxony state election results

Saxony-Anhalt state election results

Schleswig-Holstein state election results

Thuringia state election results

See also

External links

Wikipedia (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Main_Page) Elections_in_Germany (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elections_in_Germany) version history (http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Elections_in_Germany&action=history) GNU Free Documentation Lizenz (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Text_of_the_GNU_Free_Documentation_License) CC-by-sa (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.5/)

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