19th German Bundestag

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Federal eagle , logo of the German Bundestag

The 19th German Bundestag was elected on September 24, 2017 . The constituent meeting took place on October 24, 2017, 30 days after the election and thus at the latest possible time in accordance with Article 39, Paragraph 2 of the Basic Law . Only then did the term of office (" electoral period ") of the 18th German Bundestag end, in accordance with Article 39 (1) sentence 2 of the Basic Law .

Members of the Bundestag

Current composition of the
Bundestag for the 19th electoral term
       
A total of 709 seats

The 19th German Bundestag has 709 members . In accordance with Section 45 (1) sentence 1 BWahlG, they acquired their mandate with the opening of the first meeting after the election. The 19th German Bundestag has 78 more members than the 18th German Bundestag at its first session and 111 more members than the statutory number of 598 ( Section 1 (1) sentence 1 BWahlG). It is the largest Bundestag in German history to date, due to 46 overhang seats and 65 necessary compensation seats . At the same time, it is one of the largest chambers of parliament in a Western democracy (the British House of Lords is larger, however, with 810 members, as are the two chambers of the Italian or French parliaments combined).

A total of 246 members of the Union parties , 153 members of the SPD , 94 members of the Alternative für Deutschland (AfD), 80 members of the FDP , 69 members of the Left and 67 members of Bündnis 90 / Die Grünen were elected .

The 19th German Bundestag is the first since the 1957 Bundestag election in which (with the AfD) members of a party to the right of the Union parties were elected. At that time, the right-wing DP with 3.4% remained below the five percent threshold , but was still able to move into the Bundestag because it was able to win three direct candidates with the tolerance of the CDU. The AfD came to 12.6%.

Non-attached MPs

The then AfD party leader and Saxon top candidate of the AfD, Frauke Petry , declared shortly after the election that she wanted to belong to the 19th German Bundestag as a non-attached MP . She was elected as a direct candidate in the constituency of Saxon Switzerland - Eastern Ore Mountains .

On October 4, 2017, Mario Mieruch announced his exit from the AfD parliamentary group in the German Bundestag . After their resignation, both switched to the Blue Party , which had been founded a week before the election, and Petry became party chairman .

On November 26, 2018, the SPD MP Marco Bülow, directly elected in the Dortmund I constituency , resigned from the SPD, which means that 152 MPs still belong to its parliamentary group.

On December 17, 2018, Uwe Kamann announced his departure from the party and parliamentary group of the AfD, on December 18, 2019, the MP Lars Herrmann and on January 27, 2020 Verena Hartmann also announced her departure from the party and parliamentary group, which increases the number of members the AfD parliamentary group further reduced to 89 members.

Constituent session

At the suggestion of its President Norbert Lammert (CDU), the 18th German Bundestag changed the Rules of Procedure of the German Bundestag on June 1, 2017 so that the age president is no longer the oldest member of the Bundestag since 1949, but the longest member of the Bundestag associated member present. This would have opened the first session not Wilhelm von Gottberg (AfD) as the oldest member of parliament, but Wolfgang Schäuble (CDU), who has been a member of the German Bundestag since 1972.

Since Schäuble was proposed for the office of Bundestag President, he renounced the presidency of age; instead, Hermann Otto Solms (FDP), with the second longest membership in the Bundestag (1980-2013), got the chance. The constituent session was therefore opened by Solms. The AfD parliamentary group contradicted this and asked for a chairman to be elected with the exclusive task of leading the vote on the Bundestag's rules of procedure and then handing over the management of office to the senior president determined according to the rules of procedure then in effect. The application was rejected with the votes of all parliamentary groups with the approval of the AfD parliamentary group.

Bureau

To be elected, a candidate had to get at least 355 votes ( absolute majority ).

president

In its constituent session, the Bundestag then elected Wolfgang Schäuble (CDU) as President of the German Bundestag with 501 votes, 173 votes against and 30 abstentions .

Vice President

Before the vice-presidents were elected, their number was first voted on. Each parliamentary group was assigned a vice-president and the number was thus set at six.

The following candidates were proposed:

The candidates from the CSU, SPD, FDP, Greens and Left were each elected in the first ballot with the required majority. The AfD candidate, controversial in the other parliamentary groups - because of his demand to withdraw basic rights from Muslims - failed in three ballots. Glaser could only have run again with the consent of the Council of Elders . On January 18, 2018, the latter decided not to admit any further candidacies.

On November 6, 2018 it was announced that Mariana Harder-Kühnel was nominated as a candidate by her parliamentary group. It also failed in three ballots and received only 199 out of 665 votes in the last election on April 4, 2019.

The third candidate Gerold Otten received only 210 yes-votes on April 11, 2019, while 393 parliamentarians voted against him and 31 abstained. In the second ballot on May 16, 2019, he did not receive a sufficient majority with just 205 votes, nor did he receive a sufficient majority in the third ballot on June 6, 2019 (211 of 667 votes).

Paul Podolay, now the fourth candidate, failed on September 26, 2019 with 214 votes in favor and 397 against with 33 abstentions, as well as on November 7, 2019 (189 out of 638 votes) and on December 12, 2019 (197 out of 630 votes).

Demand for upper limit for members of the Bundestag

In view of the number of MPs, Hermann Otto Solms called for a downsizing of the parliament and a corresponding upper limit in his speech as senior president on October 24, 2017. The Taxpayers' Association also spoke out in favor of this.

Proportion of women

The 19th German Bundestag currently has 221 women. This means that the proportion of women is around 31% and thus almost six percentage points lower than in the 18th German Bundestag , which triggered criticism. The Bundestag, as the representative of the German people, does not adequately reflect the real proportion of around 50% women in the population. In some cases, demands are made for a Parité law . The AfD parliamentary group has the lowest proportion of women with 11%, and the parliamentary group of Bündnis 90 / Die Grünen with 58.2%.

However, the proportion of women in party members in the parties represented in the Bundestag is often lower: CDU 26.3%, CSU 20.7%, SPD 32.6%, AfD 17.1%, FDP 23.7%, Greens 40.5% , Left 36.4% (as of December 31, 2018). Taking into account the distribution of seats in the 19th German Bundestag, the average proportion of women is around 29% among the members of the parties sending the members of parliament. As a result, women are slightly disproportionately represented among MPs in relation to the parties that set up them.

See also

literature

  • Kürschner's People's Handbook of the German Bundestag. 19th legislative term . 142nd edition. NDV Neue Darmstädter Verlagsanstalt, Rheinbreitbach 2018, ISBN 978-3-95879-067-4 (337 pages, appears about every six months in revised new editions and is given out free of charge as part of the Bundestag's public relations work).

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. a b Seating order in the new Bundestag still disputed: FDP insists on a place in the middle. In: Welt Online . October 4, 2017. Retrieved October 4, 2017 .
  2. Daniel Friedrich Sturm: The new Bundestag is the largest and most expensive of all time. In: welt.de. September 25, 2017. Retrieved September 26, 2017 .
  3. Albert Funk: Why does the Bundestag now have 709 members? In: tagesspiegel.de. September 25, 2017. Retrieved September 26, 2017 .
  4. Martin Ferber: This is how expensive the giant Bundestag is. In: augsburger-allgemeine.de. October 1, 2017, accessed October 4, 2017 .
  5. Kurt Kister: Contemporary history: Stramm right - and in parliament. In: SZ . September 23, 2017. Retrieved September 30, 2017 .
  6. Pretzell announces exit from AfD. In: wiwo.de. September 26, 2017. Retrieved September 26, 2017 .
  7. Next exit from AfD parliamentary group: Ex-NRW vice follows Petry. In: derwesten.de. October 4, 2017. Retrieved October 4, 2017 .
  8. ^ Hans Monath, Matthias Meisner : Nahles opponent Marco Bülow resigns from the SPD. In: tagesspiegel.de . November 27, 2018, accessed December 19, 2018 .
  9. Aachen member of the Bundestag Uwe Kamann leaves the AfD . aachener-zeitung.de.
  10. Parvin Sadigh: Saxony: Member of Parliament Lars Herrmann leaves the AfD. In: Zeit Online . December 18, 2019, accessed December 18, 2019 .
  11. AfD parliamentary group loses more MPs. In: tagesschau.de . January 27, 2020.
  12. ^ Coalition prevents possible age presidents of the AfD. (No longer available online.) In: Zeit Online . April 27, 2017, archived from the original on September 19, 2017 ; accessed on September 26, 2017 . Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. BGBl I 2017 No. 39 of June 24, 2017, p. 1877 (PDF) @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.zeit.de
  13. ^ Stefan Braun: Profile: Hermann Otto Solms. In: sueddeutsche.de . September 28, 2017. Retrieved October 4, 2017 .
  14. ^ BT-Drucksache 19/2 bundestag.de pdf (PDF); Plenary minutes of the 1st meeting on October 24, 2017 bundestag.de txt .
  15. ^ Faz.net : AfD candidate Glaser finally failed as Bundestag Vice President . January 18, 2018; accessed on January 22, 2018.
  16. www.zeit.de .
  17. Election to the Bundestag vice: AfD candidate fails again. In: tagesschau.de . April 4, 2019, accessed April 4, 2019 .
  18. Election of the Bundestag Vice President: The third AfD candidate also fails. tagesschau.de , April 11, 2019, accessed on April 11, 2019 .
  19. Vote on Vice Bundestag: Again AfD candidate rejected. tagesschau.de , May 16, 2019, accessed on May 16, 2019 .
  20. Gerold Otten not elected Vice President in the third ballot , bundestag.de of June 6, 2019; Accessed February 21, 2020
  21. Election to the Bundestag vice: AfD candidate Podolay also fails. tagesschau.de , September 26, 2019, accessed on September 26, 2019 .
  22. Podolay again misses a majority for the office of vice president , bundestag.de of November 7, 2019; Accessed February 21, 2020
  23. Fourth AfD candidate has failed. In: tagesschau.de. December 12, 2019, accessed December 12, 2019 .
  24. Bund der Taxpayers demands upper limit for MPs. In: WZ .de. September 26, 2017. Retrieved October 24, 2017 .
  25. XXL Bundestag costs taxpayers 100 million euros more. (Not available online.) In: MDR.de . September 26, 2017, archived from the original on October 25, 2017 ; accessed on October 24, 2017 .
  26. ^ German Bundestag : Women and Men , accessed on July 14, 2020.
  27. ^ A b Marcel Pauly, Caroline Wiemann: Constituent session: This is the new Bundestag. In: Spiegel Online. October 24, 2017. Retrieved November 12, 2017 .
  28. Carla Baum: Bundestag election 2017: The proportion of women in the new Bundestag is shrinking considerably. In: The world. September 27, 2017. Retrieved November 12, 2017 .
  29. Frauke Brosius-Gersdorf: Guest contribution: Zip is compulsory. Retrieved May 16, 2019 .