Bundestag constituency Ludwigsburg

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Constituency 265: Ludwigsburg
Location of the Bundestag constituency of Ludwigsburg in Baden-Württemberg
Country Germany
state Baden-Württemberg
Constituency number 265
Eligible voters 202,968
voter turnout 80.2%
Election date September 24, 2017
Constituency representative
Surname
Photo of the MP
Political party CDU
Voting share 38.3%

The constituency of Ludwigsburg (2005: constituency 266, 2009: constituency 265) has been a federal constituency in Baden-Württemberg since 1949 . It includes the southern part of the Ludwigsburg district with the communities Asperg , Ditzingen , Eberdingen , Gerlingen , Hemmingen , Korntal-Münchingen , Kornwestheim , Ludwigsburg , Markgröningen , Möglingen , Oberriexingen , Remseck am Neckar , Schwieberdingen , Sersheim and Vaihingen an der Enz . Since 2017, the constituency has also included the municipality of Weissach from the Böblingen district

In the last federal election, 202,968 residents were eligible to vote.

Bundestag election 2017

Second votes in the 2017 federal election
Constituency 265 Ludwigsburg
 %
40
30th
20th
10
0
33.3
16.4
14.7
13.8
11.4
6.0
4.4
Otherwise.
Gains and losses
compared to 2013
 % p
   8th
   6th
   4th
   2
   0
  -2
  -4
  -6
  -8th
-10
-12
-10.7
-4.9
+7.8
+2.1
+6.3
+1.3
-1.9
Otherwise.

The following direct candidates are running for the federal election on September 24, 2017 :

Direct candidate Political party First votes in% Second votes in%
Steffen Bilger CDU 38.3 33.3
Macit Karaahmetoğlu SPD 17.8 16.4
Ingrid Hönlinger GREEN 14.2 13.8
Stefanie Knecht FDP 10.2 14.7
Martin Alexander Hess AfD 11.6 11.4
Peter Schimke The left 5.5 6.0
Günther Frölich Free voters 2.1 0.9
Erkan Karakaplan MLPD 0.3 0.1

Bundestag election 2013

The following candidates stood for election in the federal election on September 22, 2013 :

Direct candidate Political party First votes in% Second votes in%
Steffen Bilger CDU 50.41 44.01
Macit Karaahmetoğlu SPD 21.16 21.29
Alexander Deicke FDP 3.19 6.91
Ingrid Hönlinger GREEN 13.49 11.68
Peter Schimke THE LEFT 4.82 4.71
Thomas Lambeck PIRATES 2.71 2.21
Klemens bait NPD 1.40 0.85
Michael Dornhausen ÖDP 0.71 0.35
Günther Frölich FREE VOTERS 2.09 0.86

With a turnout of 80.2 percent, it was the federal constituency with the highest voter turnout in Germany.

Bundestag election 2009

The 2009 Bundestag election had the following result:

Direct candidate Political party First votes in% Second votes in% Bundestag election 2005
second votes in%
Steffen Bilger CDU 39.9 32.6 36.4
Jan Mönikes SPD 22.6 20.2 32.0
Ingrid Hönlinger GREEN 15.6 15.0 11.0
Alexander Schopf FDP 12.6 19.6 12.9
- REP - 1.0 1.1
Hans-Jürgen Kemmerle THE LEFT 6.4 6.7 3.6
Heiko Koehler NPD 1.6 1.0 1.0
Guido Klamt ödp 0.6 0.4 -
- BüSo - 0.0 0.1
- PIRATES - 1.9 -
- MLPD - 0.1 0.1
- THE VIOLETS - 0.2 -
- The animal welfare party - 0.6 -
- Referendum - 0.2 -
Hans-Dieter Völlm PBC 0.6 0.4 0.5

Constituency winner since 1949

choice Surname Political party
1949 Willi Lausen SPD
1953 Karl Mommer SPD
1957 Raban Adelmann CDU
1961 Karl Mommer SPD
1965 Karl Mommer SPD
1969 Annemarie Griesinger CDU
1972 Gunter Huonker SPD
1976 Matthias Wissmann CDU
1980 Matthias Wissmann CDU
1983 Matthias Wissmann CDU
1987 Matthias Wissmann CDU
1990 Matthias Wissmann CDU
1994 Matthias Wissmann CDU
1998 Matthias Wissmann CDU
2002 Matthias Wissmann CDU
2005 Matthias Wissmann CDU
2009 Steffen Bilger CDU
2013 Steffen Bilger CDU
2017 Steffen Bilger CDU

Constituency history

choice Constituency name area
1949 3 Ludwigsburg old district of Ludwigsburg
1953-1961 165 Ludwigsburg
1965-1972 167 Ludwigsburg
1976 167 Ludwigsburg from the district of Ludwigsburg the communities Ludwigsburg, Asperg, Benningen am Neckar , Besigheim , Bietigheim-Bissingen , Bönnigheim , Erdmannhausen , Erligheim , Freiberg am Neckar , Freudental , Gemmrigheim , Großbottwar , Hessigheim , Ingersheim , Kirchheim am Neckar , Kornwestheim, Löchgau , Marbach am Neckar , Markgröningen, Mundelsheim , Murr , Oberstenfeld , Pleidelsheim , Remseck am Neckar, Sachsenheim , Schwieberdingen, Steinheim an der Murr , Tamm and Walheim
1980-1998 169 Ludwigsburg from the district of Ludwigsburg the communities Asperg, Ditzingen, Eberdingen, Gerlingen, Hemmingen, Korntal-Münchingen, Kornwestheim, Ludwigsburg, Markgröningen, Möglingen, Oberriexingen, Remseck am Neckar, Schwieberdingen, Sersheim and Vaihingen an der Enz
2002-2005 266 Ludwigsburg
2009-2013 265 Ludwigsburg
2017– 265 Ludwigsburg From the Ludwigsburg district, the communities Asperg, Ditzingen, Eberdingen, Gerlingen, Hemmingen, Korntal-Münchingen, Kornwestheim, Ludwigsburg, Markgröningen, Möglingen, Oberriexingen, Remseck am Neckar, Schwieberdingen, Sersheim and Vaihingen an der Enz; from the Böblingen district, the Weissach community

Individual evidence

  1. constituencies
  2. Direct Candidates 265: Ludwigsburg. (No longer available online.) The Federal Returning Officer, archived from the original on September 26, 2017 ; accessed on September 13, 2017 .
  3. http://www.landkreis-ludwigsburg.de/fileadmin/kreis-lb.de/pdf-daten/politik-und-verwaltung/kreisverwaltung/Wahlen/BTW_2013/20130730_Bekanntmachung_Zulassung_Kreiswahlvorschlaege.pdf
  4. Christina Hebel, Christina Elmer, Katharina Graça Peters: Bundestag election: That was the rate of non-voters in your constituency . In: Spiegel Online . September 23, 2013 ( spiegel.de [accessed September 18, 2017]).

Web links