President of the German Bundestag

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President of the German Bundestag
Logo of the Bundestag
German politican
Acting President of the Bundestag
Wolfgang Schäuble
since October 24, 2017
Official seat Reichstag building ,
Berlin , GermanyGermanyGermany 
Chairman of Bundestag
(and Federal Assembly when electing the Federal President )
Supreme superior of the Police at the German Bundestag
Elected by Bundestag
Salutation Mr. President and President
(in the Bundestag, also acting president)
Deputy Bundestag Vice President (s)
website www.bundestag.de

The President of the German Bundestag , also known as the President of the Bundestag , is the President of the national parliament of the Federal Republic of Germany . According to the federal government's domestic protocol, it holds the second highest state office. He also acts as President of the Federal Assembly for the election of the Federal President of the Federal Republic of Germany. Current incumbent is since 24 October 2017, the CDU - member of the Bundestag Wolfgang Schaeuble .

choice

Erich Köhler speaks to the MPs after his election as the first President of the Bundestag

The President of the Bundestag is elected from among the members of the German Bundestag . The election is made by the MPs in the constituent session of the newly elected parliament. The election of the President of the Bundestag is chaired by the senior president .

Up until now, the parliamentary group with the largest number of MPs has always provided the President of the Bundestag in the German Bundestag , although there is no statutory provision on this. This state practice already developed in the Weimar Republic . The term of office of the President of the Bundestag ends with the respective legislative period . As a rule, it cannot be deducted early. A new election of the previous incumbent in the next legislative period is possible, provided that he is also a member of the new Bundestag.

"Combat candidates" in the election for president are uncommon. Only after the sudden death of Hermann Ehlers (CDU) in 1954 was there an exception. In the election on November 16, 1954 even two party colleagues competed against each other for the position of: Against the official CDU / CSU candidates Eugen Gerstenmaier joined Ernst Lemmer and only lost in the third round with only 14 votes difference (Gerstenmaier: 204 Lemmer: 190, abstentions: 15).

Deputy

Wolfgang Schäuble Norbert Lammert Wolfgang Thierse Rita Süssmuth Philipp Jenninger Rainer Barzel Richard Stücklen Karl Carstens Annemarie Renger Kai-Uwe von Hassel Eugen Gerstenmaier Hermann Ehlers Erich Köhler

The Bundestag president has more deputies ( Vice-President of the Bundestag , or parliament vice-president ) of the represented in the Bundestag factions are proposed. If one of them chairs a session of the Bundestag, he is designated as the incumbent President and has regulatory authority in the Bundestag.

On April 18, 1958, when all the Bundestag Vice-Presidents and the former senior president were absent, the Bundestag President entrusted SPD MP Kurt Pohle with leading the next session.

Up until the beginning of the 13th electoral term in 1994, the rules of procedure did not specify how many deputies the President of the Bundestag had. There were only intergroup agreements, so that there were usually four vice-presidents (one each for the three largest parliamentary groups Union, SPD and FDP and a second for the second largest parliamentary group). In 1983, the new group of the Greens submitted a motion for the first time to also be represented by a Vice-President on the Bureau. This motion was - as in the following terms - rejected. Only in 1994 the number of deputy president was set such that each group represented by at least one vice president is . As a result, the German Bundestag had five vice-presidents during the 14th electoral term (1998 to 2002), and four vice-presidents from 1994 to 1998 and 2002 to 2005. After the general election in 2005 , the SPD , CDU and CSU agreed in their exploratory talks to form a grand coalition that the SPD would provide two vice-presidents. The corresponding motion for the election of six deputies was accepted at the constituent meeting on October 18, 2005 against the parliamentary groups of the FDP , Bündnis 90 / Die Grünen and Die Linke . In the 17th electoral term, only each parliamentary group received a vice-president, a total of five. In the 18th electoral term, both the SPD and the CDU / CSU each had two vice-presidents. Although the FDP was no longer represented in the Bundestag, the number of deputies increased again to six.

In the 19th legislative period so far (as of 2020 November 28) was not chosen deputy of the AFD for the first time represented in the Bundestag vice-president, although under § 2 (1) of the Rules of Procedure of the Bundestag representing each political group by at least one vice-president of the Bundestag Presidium is .

The AfD parliamentary group had nominated its MP Albrecht Glaser in the constituent session of parliament , but he did not receive a majority in three successive votes. The AfD waived another vote on his person in March 2018. This would have required the approval of the Council of Elders. In November 2018, the AfD presented Mariana Harder-Kühnel as an applicant in a new attempt . Even this could not achieve the required majorities in any of the three votes in November and December 2018 and on April 4, 2019. While Albrecht Glaser's anti-Islamic remarks were cited regarding the non-election of Albrecht Glaser, the defeats of Harder-Kühnel in the media were mainly explained by the fact that she is an AfD member and the normalization of a party that often pursues a racist and ethnic politics and the crimes downplaying the Nazi era, was feared. Also Gerold Otten as the third candidate of the faction failed on April 11, 2019 on May 16, 2019 and June 6, 2019. The fourth candidate failed Paul Podolay on September 26, 2019 on November 7, 2019 on December 12, 2019 . Karsten's help failed on January 16, 2020, March 5, 2020 and May 7, 2020 as the fifth candidate of the AFD. On November 26, 2020, Harald Weyel , the sixth candidate of the AfD, also failed .

Legal basis

The legal basis for the office of the President of the Bundestag and his deputy is initially Article 40 of the Basic Law : After that, the Bundestag elects its President and his deputy. The Bundestag also has its own rules of procedure .

According to a ruling by the Federal Constitutional Court in 1952, the rules of procedure must be resolved anew for each new electoral term. In practice, however, the previous rules of procedure - possibly with changes - are usually adopted as the rules of procedure for the new electoral term. Among other things, it regulates the rights and duties of the President of the Bundestag and the number of Vice-Presidents.

tasks

The most important function of the President of the Bundestag is to lead the plenary sessions . To do this, he takes a seat on the podium in the plenary hall of the Bundestag, so he sits across from the other members of the Bundestag. The Bundestag President shall represent the Bundestag and is the addressee of all bills and templates from the federal government , the Federal Council are introduced or from the middle of the Bundestag. He is also the recipient of all petitions that come from the ranks of Parliament or are addressed to the Bundestag.

The President is entitled to domiciliary rights and police powers, which are enforced by the police at the German Bundestag . It is also the highest service authority of the Bundestag officials, whereby it makes certain personnel decisions in agreement with the Presidium. Further rights and obligations of the President of the Bundestag are regulated in the rules of procedure.

Pursuant to Section 36 of the Rules of Procedure, the President can refer speakers who diverge from the subject matter. Furthermore, the President can call members of the Bundestag to order by naming them if they violate order or the dignity of the Bundestag. “If a speaker is called three times to the cause or three times during a speech and the consequences of a third call to the matter or to order are pointed out the second time, the President must withdraw him from the floor and may do so in the same debate on the same Do not resubmit the item to be negotiated ”(Section 36 (2) of the Rules of Procedure). Regardless of a call to order, the President can set a fine of EUR 1,000 in accordance with Section 37 of the Rules of Procedure (EUR 2,000 in the event of repetition). According to Section 38 of the Rules of Procedure, the President can expel a member of the Bundestag from the hall for the duration of the session for gross violation of order or the dignity of the Bundestag, even without a call to order or a fine being imposed. A member of the Bundestag can subsequently be excluded for a maximum of thirty session days. The member of the Bundestag concerned can lodge a reasoned objection in writing against all sanctions imposed by the President up to the next day of the plenary session. The Bundestag decides on the objection without discussion (Section 39 of the Rules of Procedure).

The President of the Bundestag is also the recipient of the accounts of the political parties, monitors compliance with the Party Donation Act and regulates the reimbursement of election campaign costs .

income

The President of the Bundestag receives the double diet of a member of the Bundestag, currently around 19,100 euros per month (from 2017, parliamentary allowance) as well as additional lump sums (tax-free lump sum of approx. 4000 euros, official expenses allowance of approx. 1000 euros); the vice-presidents each receive one and a half times the diet, currently around 14,300 euros per month plus lump sums. The flat-rate fee will be reduced accordingly if the Bundestag is not present.

The amount of the diet for the President and the Vice-Presidents is stipulated in the Deputies Act , Section 11, Paragraph 2. The lump-sum fee is set out in Section 12 (2) (here for all members of the parliament), the reimbursement for official expenses in Section 12 (5).

The diet of the Bundestag President is slightly below the official salaries of the Federal President (the highest representative of the state) and the Federal Chancellor (the latter, however, usually also receives a diet as a member of the Bundestag).

List of presidents

President of the German Bundestag of the Federal Republic of Germany
Surname Life dates fraction Beginning of the term of office Term expires Length of term of office
01 Erich Koehler 1892-1958 CDU / CSU September 7, 1949 October 18, 1950 1 year and 41 days
02 Hermann Ehlers 1904-1954 CDU / CSU October 19, 1950 October 29, 1954 (†) 4 years and 10 days
03 Eugen Gerstenmaier 1906-1986 CDU / CSU November 16, 1954 January 31, 1969 14 years and 76 days
04th Kai-Uwe von Hassel 1913-1997 CDU / CSU 5th February 1969 December 13, 1972 3 years and 312 days
05 Annemarie Renger 1919-2008 SPD December 13, 1972 December 14, 1976 4 years and 1 day
06th Karl Carstens 1914-1992 CDU / CSU December 14, 1976 May 31, 1979 2 years and 168 days
07th Richard Stücklen 1916-2002 CDU / CSU May 31, 1979 March 29, 1983 3 years and 302 days
08th Rainer Barzel 1924-2006 CDU / CSU March 29, 1983 October 25, 1984 1 year and 210 days
09 Philipp Jenninger 1932-2018 CDU / CSU 5th November 1984 November 11, 1988 4 years and 6 days
10 Rita Süssmuth * 1937 CDU / CSU November 25, 1988 October 26, 1998 9 years and 335 days
11 Wolfgang Thierse * 1943 SPD October 26, 1998 October 18, 2005 6 years and 357 days
12th Norbert Lammert * 1948 CDU / CSU October 18, 2005 October 24, 2017 12 years and 6 days
13th German politican * 1942 CDU / CSU October 24, 2017 3 years and 36 days

Members of the Presidium

The President of the Bundestag and his deputies form the Bundestag Presidium . The following overview of presidents and vice-presidents is arranged according to electoral terms and political group affiliation.

Electoral term President Vice Presidents
CDU / CSU SPD PDS /
Die Linke 1
Alliance 90 /
The Greens
FDP Other factions
1
(1949-1953)
Erich Köhler (CDU)
(1949–1950)
Hermann Ehlers (CDU)
(1950–1953)
Carlo Schmid Hermann Schäfer
2
(1953-1957)
Hermann Ehlers (CDU)
(1953–1954)
Eugen Gerstenmaier (CDU)
(1954–1957)
Richard Jaeger (CSU) Ludwig Schneider
(1953–1956) 2
Max Becker
(1956–1957) 2
FVP / DP

Ludwig Schneider
(1956–1957) 2

3
(1957-1961)
Eugen Gerstenmaier (CDU) Max Becker
(1957–1960)
Thomas Dehler
(1960–1961)
Victor-Emanuel Preusker
(1958–1960) 3
4
(1961-1965)
Carlo Schmid
Erwin Schoettle
Thomas Dehler
5
(1965-1969)
Eugen Gerstenmaier (CDU)
(1965–1969)
Kai-Uwe von Hassel (CDU)
(1969)
Richard Jaeger (CSU)
(1965, 1967–1969)
Maria Probst (CSU)
(1965–1967)
Carlo Schmid
(1965–1966)
Karl Mommer
(1966–1969)
Erwin Schoettle
Thomas Dehler
(1965–1967)
Walter Scheel
(1967–1969)
6
(1969–1972)
Kai-Uwe von Hassel (CDU) Richard Jaeger (CSU) Carlo Schmid
Hermann Schmitt-Vockenhausen
Liselotte Funcke
7
(1972-1976)
Annemarie Renger (SPD) Kai-Uwe von Hassel (CDU)
Richard Jaeger (CSU)
Hermann Schmitt-Vockenhausen
8
(1976-1980)
Karl Carstens (CDU)
(1976–1979)
Richard Stücklen (CSU)
(1979–1980)
Richard Stücklen (CSU)
(1976–1979)
Richard von Weizsäcker (CDU)
(1979–1980)
Annemarie Renger
Hermann Schmitt-Vockenhausen
(1976–1979)
Georg Leber
(1979–1980)
Liselotte Funcke
(1976–1979)
Richard Wurbs
(1979–1980)
9
(1980-1983)
Richard Stücklen (CSU) Richard von Weizsäcker (CDU)
(1980–1981)
Heinrich Windelen (CDU)
(1981–1983)
Annemarie Renger
Georg Leber
Richard Wurbs
10
(1983-1987)
Rainer Barzel (CDU)
(1983–1984)
Philipp Jenninger (CDU)
(1984–1987)
Richard Stücklen (CSU) Annemarie Renger
Heinz Westphal
Richard Wurbs
(1983–1984)
Dieter-Julius Cronenberg
(1984–1987)
11
(1987-1990)
Philipp Jenninger (CDU)
(1987–1988)
Rita Süssmuth (CDU)
(1988–1990)
Dieter-Julius Cronenberg
12
(1990-1994)
Rita Süssmuth (CDU) Hans Klein (CSU) Helmuth Becker
Renate Schmidt
13
(1994-1998)
Hans Klein (CSU)
(1994–1996)
Michaela Geiger (CSU)
(1997–1998)
Hans-Ulrich Klose Antje Vollmer Burkhard Hirsch
14
(1998-2002)
Wolfgang Thierse (SPD) Rudolf Seiters (CDU) Anke Fuchs Petra Bläss Hermann Otto Solms
15
(2002-2005)
Norbert Lammert (CDU) Susanne Kastner
16
(2005-2009)
Norbert Lammert (CDU) Gerda Hasselfeldt (CSU) Susanne Kastner
Wolfgang Thierse
Petra Pau
(since 2006) 4
Katrin Göring-Eckardt
17
(2009-2013)
Gerda Hasselfeldt (CSU)
(2009–2011)
Eduard Oswald (CSU)
(2011–2013)
Wolfgang Thierse
18
(2013-2017)
Peter Hintze (CDU)
(2013-2016) 5
Michaela Noll (CDU)
(2017) 5
Johannes Singhammer (CSU)
Edelgard Bulmahn
Ulla Schmidt
Claudia Roth
19
(since 2017)
Wolfgang Schäuble (CDU) Hans-Peter Friedrich (CSU) Thomas Oppermann
(2017–2020) 7
Dagmar Ziegler
(from November 26, 2020)
Wolfgang Kubicki AfD

none 6

114th parliamentary term (1998–2002): PDS ; from the 16th electoral term (2005): Die Linke .
2 In 1956, Ludwig Schneider switched from the FDP to the newly founded Free People's Party (FVP), which merged with the German Party (DP) in 1957 . As a representative of the FDP, Max Becker was re-elected to the presidium.
3On April 23, 1958, Victor-Emanuel Preusker was elected as the DP's candidate for fourth vice-president. On July 1, 1960 he resigned from the DP and on September 20, 1960 joined the CDU. On October 4, 1960, he resigned his vice-presidency.
4thIn the 16th electoral term, Lothar Bisky, as a candidate of the Left parliamentary group, did not receive the majority required for the position of vice-president in four ballots. As a result, the parliamentary group initially left the post it was entitled to vacant. On April 7, 2006, Petra Pau , a representative of the parliamentary group, was finally elected to the Presidium.
5 Michaela Noll was elected as the new Vice-President of the 18th German Bundestag on January 19, 2017, and thus also as the successor to Vice-President Peter Hintze , who died on November 26, 2016 .
6thIn the constituent meeting of the 19th electoral term, Albrecht Glaser, as a candidate for the AfD parliamentary group, did not achieve the required majority for the position of vice-president in three ballots. The office initially remained vacant. On November 6, 2018, Mariana Harder-Kühnel was nominated as a candidate by her parliamentary group and the waiver was therefore lifted. She was not elected either in the first or in the second ballot. It also failed in the third ballot on April 4, 2019. Also Gerold Otten as the third candidate of the faction failed on 11 April 2019 and Paul Viktor Podolay as the fourth candidate on 12 December 2019 Karsten's help failed as the fifth candidate on May 7, 2020. On November 26, 2020 Harald Weyel the first ballot .
7th Thomas Oppermann died on October 25, 2020 after collapsing directly before a live interview for the ZDF broadcast in Berlin and being admitted to the Göttingen University Hospital. Dagmar Ziegler was elected as his successor on November 26, 2020.

See also

literature

Web links

Footnotes

  1. Art. 39 Basic Law for the Federal Republic of Germany (GG)
  2. Self-confidence in the matter. (PDF; 5.4 MB) In: Focus on the Bundestag Special: The Presidium of the German Bundestag. German Bundestag, Public Relations Department, 2011, pp. 9–11 , archived from the original on July 18, 2011 ; accessed on May 1, 2017 .
  3. ^ Protocol-based priority issues. In: Inland protocol of the federal government. Federal Ministry of the Interior, accessed on May 1, 2017 .
  4. ^ German Bundestag - function and task of the Bundestag President and the Presidium. Retrieved April 4, 2019 .
  5. The senior president: A constitutional regulation and its alternatives . Springer-Verlag, 2011, ISBN 978-3-531-94362-6 , pp. 214 ( books.google.de [accessed August 29, 2020]).
  6. Markus Wehner, Berlin: Statements on Islam: Gauland: All AfD MPs think like glasses . ISSN  0174-4909 ( faz.net [accessed April 6, 2019]).
  7. A scandal or not? This question is particularly sensitive. Retrieved April 6, 2019 .
  8. A scandal or not? This question is particularly sensitive. Retrieved April 6, 2019 .
  9. Fourth AfD candidate has failed. In: tagesschau.de. December 12, 2019, accessed December 12, 2019 .
  10. Volker Müller: German Bundestag - AfD again proposes Karsten Hilse as Vice President of the Bundestag ... Accessed on May 7, 2020 .
  11. n-tv NEWS: Ziegler elected Bundestag vice president. November 26, 2020, accessed November 28, 2020 .
  12. BVerfG, judgment of March 6, 1952, Az. 2 BvE 1/51, BVerfGE 1, 144 .
  13. ^ Presidium. German Bundestag , accessed on May 1, 2017 .
  14. ^ German Bundestag - home page. Retrieved November 26, 2020 .
  15. Michaela Noll elected as the new Vice President of the Bundestag. Retrieved January 19, 2017 .
  16. Volker Müller: German Bundestag - Harder-Kühnel again not elected Vice-President of the Bundestag. Retrieved December 13, 2018 .
  17. Volker Müller: Gerold Otten misses a majority for the office of Vice President. Retrieved April 11, 2019 .
  18. Again no majority for Paul Viktor Podolay as Vice President. Retrieved December 12, 2019 .
  19. Karsten Hilse not elected Vice President of the Bundestag. Retrieved May 7, 2020 .
  20. https://www.bundestag.de/#url=L2Rva3VtZW50ZS90ZXh0YXJjaGl2LzIwMjAva3c0OC1kZS13YWhsLXN0ZWxsdmVydHJldGVyaW4tODA3NzU0&mod=mod493054
  21. Thomas Oppermann died. Deutschlandfunk , accessed on October 26, 2020 .
  22. SPD politician Thomas Oppermann is dead. Tagesspiegel , accessed on October 26, 2020 .
  23. Bundestag Vice President Thomas Oppermann has died. t-online.de , accessed on October 26, 2020 .