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2021 German federal election

Federal elections were held in Germany on 26 September 2021 to elect the members of the 20th Bundestag. State elections in Berlin and Mecklenburg-Vorpommern were also held. Incumbent chancellor Angela Merkel, first elected in 2005, chose not to run again, marking the first time that an incumbent Chancellor of the Federal Republic of Germany has not sought re-election.

2021 German federal election

← 2017 26 September 2021 (2021-09-26) Next →

All 736 seats in the Bundestag, including 138 overhang and leveling seats
369 seats needed for a majority
Opinion polls
Registered61,181,072 0.8%
Turnout46,854,508 (76.6%) 0.4pp
  First party Second party Third party
 
Candidate Olaf Scholz Armin Laschet Annalena Baerbock[a]
Party SPD CDU/CSU Greens
Last election 20.5%, 153 seats 32.9%, 246 seats 8.9%, 67 seats
Seats won 206 197 118
Seat change 53 49 51
Popular vote 11,955,434 11,178,298 6,852,206
Percentage 25.7% 24.1% 14.8%[b]
Swing 5.2pp 8.8pp 5.9pp

  Fourth party Fifth party Sixth party
 
Candidate Christian Lindner Alice Weidel &
Tino Chrupalla
Janine Wissler &
Dietmar Bartsch
Party FDP AfD Left
Last election 10.7%, 80 seats 12.6%, 94 seats 9.2%, 69 seats
Seats won 92 83 39
Seat change 12 11 30
Popular vote 5,319,952 4,803,902 2,270,906
Percentage 11.5% 10.3% 4.9%
Swing 0.8pp 2.3pp 4.3pp

The left side shows constituency winners of the election by their party colours. The right side shows party list winners of the election for the additional members by their party colours.

Government before election

Fourth Merkel cabinet
CDU/CSUSPD

Government after election

Scholz cabinet
SPDGreenFDP

With 25.7% of total votes, the Social Democratic Party of Germany (SPD) recorded their best result since 2005, and emerged as the largest party for the first time since 2002. The ruling CDU/CSU, which had led a grand coalition with the SPD since 2013, recorded their worst ever result with 24.1%, a significant decline from 32.9% in 2017. Alliance 90/The Greens achieved their best result in history at 14.8%, while the Free Democratic Party (FDP) made small gains and finished on 11.5%. The Alternative for Germany (AfD) fell from third to fifth place with 10.3%, a decline of 2.3 percentage points. The Left suffered their worst showing since their official formation in 2007, failing to cross the 5% electoral threshold by just over one-tenth of a percentage point. The party was nonetheless entitled to full proportional representation, as it won three direct constituencies.

With a fifth grand coalition being dismissed by both the CDU/CSU and the SPD, the FDP and the Greens were considered kingmakers. On 23 November, following complex coalition talks, the SPD, FDP and Greens formalized an agreement to form a traffic light coalition, which was approved by all three parties. Olaf Scholz and his cabinet were elected by the Bundestag on 8 December.

Background

2017 federal election and government formation

The 2017 federal election was held after a four-year grand coalition between the CDU/CSU and the SPD. Though the CDU/CSU remained the biggest parliamentary group, both it and the SPD suffered significant losses. The SPD leadership, recognising the party's unsatisfactory performance after four years in government, announced that it would go into opposition.[2] With the CDU/CSU having pledged not to work with either the AfD or The Left before the federal election, the only remaining option for a majority government was a Jamaica coalition consisting of the CDU/CSU, FDP, and the Greens.[3][4] Exploratory talks between the parties were held over the next six weeks, though the FDP withdrew from the negotiations on 20 November, citing irreconcilable differences between the parties on migration and energy policies.[5][6] Chancellor Angela Merkel consulted with President Frank-Walter Steinmeier, who implored all parties to reconsider in order to avoid fresh elections.[7][8]

The SPD and their leader Martin Schulz indicated their willingness to enter into discussions for another coalition government with the CDU/CSU.[9] The SPD leadership voted to enter into exploratory discussion on 15 December 2017[10] and at a party congress in January 2018 a majority of the party's delegates voted to support the coalition talks.[11][12] The text of the final agreement was agreed to by the CDU/CSU and the SPD on 7 February, though was conditioned on the approval of a majority of the SPD's party membership.[13] The 463,723 members of the SPD voted to approve or reject the deal from 20 February to 2 March,[14][15] with the result announced on 4 March. A total of 78.39% of members cast valid votes, of which 66.02% voted in favor of another grand coalition.[16] Merkel was voted in by the Bundestag for a fourth term as chancellor on 14 March, with 364 votes for, 315 against, 9 abstentions, and 4 invalid votes, just 9 more votes than the 355 needed for a majority.[17] The new government was officially referred to as the Fourth Merkel cabinet.[18][19]

Party leadership changes and political instability

Merkel's final government was subject to intense instability. The 2018 German government crisis saw the longstanding alliance between the CDU and CSU threaten to split over asylum seeker policy. Interior Minister and CSU leader Horst Seehofer threatened to undercut Merkel's authority by closing German borders for asylum seekers registered in another European Union (EU) country. The split, eventually repaired following a summit with EU countries, threatened to bring down the government.[20] Following his party's historically low result in the 2018 Bavarian state election, Seehofer was replaced as CSU leader by new Bavarian Minister-President Markus Söder at a party conference in January 2019, while he retained his position as Interior Minister in the Fourth Merkel cabinet.[21]

In October 2018, Merkel announced that she would resign as leader of the CDU at the party's conference in December 2018 and step down as Chancellor of Germany at the forthcoming election, following poor results at state elections for the CSU in Bavaria and for the CDU in Hesse.[22][23] Merkel's allegedly preferred candidate for the party leadership, Annegret Kramp-Karrenbauer, narrowly defeated Friedrich Merz, who had been a rival of Merkel around 2002 and had left politics in 2009 criticising her decisions and leadership.[24] Kramp-Karrenbauer struggled to unify the party's liberal and conservative factions, and in February 2020, when she failed to lead the Thuringia state CDU towards a solution of the government crisis there, she announced her intention to withdraw her interest in running as the CDU nominee for chancellor at the election and step down as party leader.[25] A party convention to elect a new leader was scheduled for April but was repeatedly delayed due to the COVID-19 pandemic. The election was held in January 2021, with Armin Laschet, incumbent Minister-President of North Rhine-Westphalia, winning with 52.8% of delegate votes. Merz was his main opponent at 47.2%.[26]

The other party in the coalition government, the SPD, also had leadership instability. Following their worst general election result since 1945, at the beginning of the new government the party elected Andrea Nahles as their leader in April 2018. Nahles had already been elected leader of the SPD parliamentary group after the federal election in September when the party still planned to go into opposition.[27][28] She was unsuccessful in improving the party's stock with the electorate as it continued to slide in opinion polls and was for the first time in history well beaten by the centre-left party Alliance 90/The Greens at the 2019 European Parliament election. She resigned on 2 June 2019, precipitating a leadership election for the SPD.[29] Progressive candidates Norbert Walter-Borjans and Saskia Esken defeated the more moderate candidates Olaf Scholz and Klara Geywitz, and were elected co-leaders by the party's membership. Their election raised prospects of the coalition government collapsing and early elections being called, although Reuters reported that the duo would seek to achieve agreement from the CDU/CSU on increasing public spending rather than allow the government to collapse.[30] In August 2020, the party appointed Merkel's deputy Vice-Chancellor Scholz as its candidate for chancellor at the election, despite him having lost to Walter-Borjans and Esken in the party leadership election.[31]

Cem Özdemir and Simone Peter stood down as co-leaders of the Greens after the failed Jamaica negotiations, and Annalena Baerbock and Robert Habeck were elected as their successors in January 2018. Dissatisfaction with the SPD and the federal government saw a rise in Greens' polling numbers throughout 2018. They scored record results in the Bavarian and Hessian state elections in October and subsequently surpassed the SPD in public opinion, settling in second behind the CDU/CSU for the next three years. The party had its best ever showings at the 2019 European Parliament election, 2020 Hamburg state election, and 2021 Baden-Württemberg state election. They briefly polled in first place during two brief periods, first after the 2019 European Parliament election and again after the nomination of chancellor candidates in April 2021.[32]

The Left also underwent a change in leadership, with Katja Kipping and Bernd Riexinger stepping down after nine years as party co-leaders. They were succeeded by Janine Wissler and Susanne Hennig-Wellsow at a party conference held digitally on 27 February 2021. Wissler is considered a member of the party's left wing, formerly aligned with the Socialist Left faction, while Hennig-Wellsow is considered a moderate and part of the party's pragmatic wing. Both support their party's participation in federal government, particularly Hennig-Wellsow, who played a major role in the red–red–green coalition government of The Left, the SPD, and the Greens in the state of Thuringia.[33]

Electoral system

Germany uses the mixed-member proportional representation system, a system of proportional representation combined with elements of first-past-the-post voting. The Bundestag has 598 nominal members, elected for a four-year term; these seats are distributed between the sixteen German states in proportion to the states' number of eligible voters.[34]

Each voter can cast two votes: a constituency vote (first vote) and a party list vote (second vote). Based solely on the first votes, 299 members are elected in single-member constituencies by first-past-the-post voting. The second votes are used to produce a proportional number of seats for parties, first in the states, and then in the Bundestag. Seats are allocated using the Sainte-Laguë method. If a party wins fewer constituency seats in a state than its second votes would entitle it to, it receives additional seats from the relevant state list. Parties can file lists in every single state under certain conditions, such as a fixed number of supporting signatures. Parties can receive second votes only in those states in which they have filed a state list.[34] If a party, by winning single-member constituencies in one state, receives more seats than it would be entitled to according to its second vote share in that state, the excess seats become known as overhang seats; to avoid negative vote weight, those overhang seats are compensated for in the other states, restoring proportionality according to second votes cast nationwide.[34]

To qualify for proportional seat distribution, a party must receive more second votes nationwide than the electoral threshold of 5%. This requirement is waived for parties winning at least three single-member constituencies.[c] As result of this waiver,[d] parties have benefited on three occasions, such as the DP in the 1957 West German federal election and the PDS in the 1994 German federal election. Parties representing recognized national minorities are exempt from the electoral threshold. As of 2021, these minorities are the Danish, Frisians, Sorbs, and Romani people.[34][35]

Date assignment process

The Basic Law for the Federal Republic of Germany and the Federal Election Act provides that federal elections must be held on a Sunday or on a federal holiday[e] no earlier than 46 and no later than 48 months after the first sitting of the preceding session, unless a snap election is called or a state of defence is declared.[36] Under this rule, the 2021 federal election had to take place on a Sunday between 29 August and 24 October (inclusive), as the previous 19th Bundestag had held its first sitting on 24 October 2017.[37] The President of Germany sets the exact date for the election.[38] On 9 December 2020, President Frank-Walter Steinmeier ordered the election to be held on 26 September 2021.[39]

Observers and false claims of voter fraud

For the fourth time since 2009, the 2021 federal election was observed by OSCE,[40] providing four experts from three OSCE states.[41]

The Center for Monitoring, Analysis and Strategy (CeMAS) found that false claims of voter fraud had become commonplace on Telegram in Germany, with accusations against Dominion Voting Systems being common despite the company's technology not being used in German elections. CeMAS researcher Miro Dittrich said, "We have seen far-right actors try to claim election fraud since at least 2016, but it didn't take off. When Trump started telling the 'big lie,' it became a big issue in Germany, sometimes bigger than the pandemic, because far-right groups and the AfD are carefully monitoring the success Trump is having with this narrative."[42]

Political parties and candidates

The table below lists the parliamentary groups of the 19th Bundestag.

Name Ideology Leading
candidate(s)
Leader(s) 2017 result
Votes (%) Seats
CDU/CSU CDU Christian Democratic Union of Germany
Christlich Demokratische Union Deutschlands
Christian democracy Armin Laschet Armin Laschet 26.8%
246 / 709
CSU Christian Social Union in Bavaria
Christlich-Soziale Union in Bayern
Markus Söder 6.2%[f]
SPD Social Democratic Party of Germany
Sozialdemokratische Partei Deutschlands
Social democracy Olaf Scholz Saskia Esken
Norbert Walter-Borjans
20.5%
153 / 709
AfD Alternative for Germany
Alternative für Deutschland
Right-wing populism Alice Weidel
Tino Chrupalla
Jörg Meuthen
Tino Chrupalla
12.6%
94 / 709
FDP Free Democratic Party
Freie Demokratische Partei
Classical liberalism Christian Lindner Christian Lindner 10.7%
80 / 709
Linke The Left
Die Linke
Democratic socialism Janine Wissler
Dietmar Bartsch
Janine Wissler
Susanne Hennig-Wellsow
9.2%
69 / 709
Grüne Alliance 90/The Greens
Bündnis 90/Die Grünen
Green politics Annalena Baerbock[a]
Robert Habeck
Annalena Baerbock
Robert Habeck
8.9%
67 / 709

Lead candidates

After the election of Minister-President of North Rhine-Westphalia, Armin Laschet as federal CDU chairman in January 2021, he became the presumptive CDU nominee for the Union's joint chancellor candidacy. Laschet was challenged by Minister-President of Bavaria Markus Söder of the CSU, who consistently polled well among voters and had been discussed as a potential candidate since mid-2020.[43] As the contest intensified in March/April 2021, Söder was backed by the CSU as well as some state and local CDU associations, while Laschet received the support of most of the CDU. The two men failed to come to an agreement by the given deadline of 19 April,[44] leading the federal CDU board to hold an impromptu meeting to break the deadlock. The board voted 31 to 9 in favour of Laschet.[45] After the vote, Söder announced his support for Laschet as chancellor candidate.[46]

On 10 August 2020, the SPD nominated incumbent Vice Chancellor and Finance Minister Olaf Scholz as their lead candidate for the election. Scholz, who served as Mayor of Hamburg from 2011 to 2018, unsuccessfully sought the SPD leadership in the 2019 leadership election.[47] Scholz was formally elected at a party conference on 8–9 May 2021, supported by 96% of delegates.[48]

The AfD's lead candidates were chosen via a membership vote held from 17 to 24 May 2021. The ticket of party co-chairman Tino Chrupalla and Bundestag co-leader Alice Weidel were elected with 71% of votes; they were opposed by the ticket of former German Air Force lieutenant-general Joachim Wundrak and MdB Joana Cotar, who won 24%. 14,815 votes were cast, corresponding to a turnout of 48%.[49]

On 21 March 2021, the FDP association in North Rhine-Westphalia elected federal chairman Christian Lindner as top candidate for the party list in that state.[50] He was re-elected as chairman on 14 May, winning 93% of votes with no opponent. The vote also served to confirm him as lead candidate for the federal election.[51]

The Left announced Janine Wissler and Dietmar Bartsch as their co-lead candidates on 2 May 2021. Wissler was elected federal party co-leader earlier in the year alongside Susanne Hennig-Wellsow, who chose not to seek the co-lead candidacy. Bartsch had co-chaired The Left's Bundestag group since 2015, and was previously co-lead candidate in the 2017 federal election.[52] Wissler and Bartsch were formally selected by the party executive on 8–9 May, receiving 87% of the votes.[53]

Due to their rise in national opinion polling since 2018, the Greens were expected to forgo the traditional dual lead-candidacy in favour of selecting a single chancellor candidate. Party co-leaders Annalena Baerbock and Robert Habeck were considered the only plausible candidates.[54] Baerbock was announced as chancellor candidate on 19 April.[55] Both Baerbock and Habeck were co-lead candidates for the party's election campaign.[56]

Competing parties

A total of 47 parties and lists were approved to run in the 2021 federal election, including the seven which won seats in the 19th Bundestag. Of these, 40 ran party lists in at least one state, while 7 ran only direct candidates. In addition, 196 independent candidates ran in the various direct constituencies.[57]

In the table below, green shading indicates that the party ran a list in the indicated state. The number in each box indicates how many direct candidates the party ran in the indicated state.

Party State
BW BY BE BB HB HH HE MV NI NW RP SL SN ST SH TH
Christian Democratic Union of Germany (CDU) 38 12 10 2 6 22 6 30 64 15 4 16 9 11 8
Social Democratic Party of Germany (SPD) 38 46 12 10 2 6 22 6 30 64 15 4 16 9 11 8
Alternative for Germany (AfD) 38 44 12 10 2 6 22 6 27 63 15 4 16 9 11 8
Free Democratic Party (FDP) 38 46 12 10 2 6 22 6 30 64 15 4 16 9 11 8
The Left (DIE LINKE) 38 45 12 10 2 6 22 6 30 64 14 4 16 9 11 8
Alliance 90/The Greens (GRÜNE) 38 46 12 10 2 6 22 6 30 64 15 4 16 9 11 8
Christian Social Union in Bavaria (CSU) 46
Free Voters (FREIE WÄHLER) 38 46 7 9 2 5 21 6 22 57 15 4 12 8 11 6
Die PARTEI 33 31 12 9 2 2 9 2 8 52 10 4 11 2 7 7
Human Environment Animal Protection (Tierschutzpartei) 8 6 12 1 1 3 9 3 3 1
National Democratic Party of Germany (NPD) 1 4
Pirate Party Germany (PIRATEN) 3 6 6 5 1 2 4 3 8 4 1 3 1
Ecological Democratic Party (ÖDP) 16 46 10 7 2 5 5 2 9 4 13 1 4
V-Partei3 – Party for Change, Vegetarians and Vegans (V-Partei3) 1 11 1 1 1 2 1
Democracy in Motion (DiB) 6
Bavaria Party (BP) 24
Animal Protection Alliance (Tierschutzallianz) 2
Marxist–Leninist Party of Germany (MLPD) 22 9 7 1 2 6 5 4 6 31 1 1 4 2 2 8
Party for Health Research (Gesundheitsforschung) 2 1
German Communist Party (DKP) 4 1 2 12 1 3
Human World (MENSCHLICHE WELT) 1 1
The Greys – For all Generations (Die Grauen) 1
Civil Rights Movement Solidarity (BüSo) 2 5 1 1
Party of Humanists (Die Humanisten) 10 3 3 1 2 1 1 1 1 3
Garden Party (Gartenpartei) 1
The Urbans. A HipHop Party (du.) 2 1 3
Socialist Equality Party, Fourth International (SGP)
Grassroots Democratic Party of Germany (dieBasis) 36 46 11 10 2 6 21 5 27 60 15 4 16 9 11 7
Alliance C – Christians for Germany (Bündnis C) 1 2 4 2 2
Third Way (III. Weg) 1
Citizens' Movement for Progress and Change (BÜRGERBEWEGUNG) 3
The Pinks/Alliance 21 (BÜNDNIS21) 1 1
European Party LOVE (LIEBE) 1
Liberal Conservative Reformers (LKR) 3 7 10 1 1 8 7 3 4 6 2
Party for Progress (PdF)
Lobbyists for Children (LfK)
South Schleswig Voters' Association (SSW)[g] 5
Team Todenhöfer – The Justice Party (Team Todenhöfer) 2 1
Independents for Citizen-oriented Democracy (UNABHÄNGIGE) 2 3 1 1 2 2
Volt Germany (Volt) 13 12 2 1 1 3 5 15 10 2
From now... Democracy by Referendum (Volksabstimmung) 2
Bergpartei, die "ÜberPartei" (B*) 1
The Others (sonstige) 1
Family Party of Germany (FAMILIE) 1
Grey Panthers (Graue Panther) 1 1 2 2 1
Climate List Baden-Württemberg (KlimalisteBW) 7
Thuringian Homeland Party (THP) 1
Independents and voter groups 15 26 9 18 2 15 2 21 31 22 1 22 7 2 3
Party BW BY BE BB HB HH HE MV NI NW RP SL SN ST SH TH
Total constituencies 38 46 12 10 2 6 22 6 30 64 15 4 16 9 11 8

Registration of candidates

In July 2021, the respective state electoral committees rejected the lists of the AfD in Bremen and the Greens in Saarland. The AfD list was rejected for formal reasons, while the Green list in Saarland was declared invalid due to a controversial nomination process, in which one third of the state delegates were excluded from the nomination convention. Both state parties filed motions against the rulings. The federal electoral committee dismissed the motion of the Saarland Greens, while the AfD list in Bremen was permitted to run in the elections. The Green Party will thus not be eligible for the proportional vote in Saarland for the first time in the party's history.[58]

Campaign

Major issues

The federal election was impacted by incumbent chancellor Angela Merkel's decision not to run again,[59] and candidates to present themselves as the natural successor to Merkel.[60]

The 2021 European floods put the climate issue back on the agenda in July. The SPD called for "everything to be done to stop global warming," while the CDU/CSU wanted to "speed up climate protection measures".[61] By the end of July, 56 per cent of Germans believed that the floods made it "even more important than before" to combat climate change, and 73 per cent believed the government was not doing enough in this area; only the AfD's supporters were overwhelmingly of the opposite opinion.[62] Following those events, six people under the age of 30 began a hunger strike in front of the Reichstag building at the end of August. They demanded a sincere dialogue with the leaders of the main political parties before the elections and the establishment of a citizens' convention to decide on ambitious measures for the climate.[63]

During the deadly German floods, while visiting Erftstadt on 18 July, the CDU/CSU lead candidate Armin Laschet was caught laughing on camera and making jokes while President Frank-Walter Steinmeier was speaking. Laschet was heavily criticized, despite his apology saying: "It was stupid and shouldn't have happened and I regret it." Both the CDU/CSU and Laschet's ratings suffered heavily in opinion polls and the SPD took the lead.[64][65]

Red–red–green coalition

During the campaign, Scholz rejected tax cuts for the rich as immoral,[66] pledged to "increase taxes on the wealthy, spend on cleaner technology and expand social programs",[67] and a minimum wage increase to 12 euros.[68] In general, there was broad agreement among left-leaning parties on issues such as climate change, education, finance, health, and higher taxes for the rich, and The Left being more pro-European than similar left-wing parties like La France Insoumise,[69] while issues of disagreement were foreign policy and security.[70] Writing for The Guardian, Philip Oltermann commented: "Paradoxically, some Social Democrats see such commonalities as an obstacle rather than a boon for an effective power-sharing deal: since all three parties already call for a wealth tax, for example, it's unclear what policy Die Linke could sell its supporters as a win even if were to get its hands on the coveted labour ministry."[69] Both the SPD and the Greens did not speak much on the subject but did not rule it out in public, although in private they were more sceptics. One SPD delegate was quoted as saying: "To prepare the ground for a robust and functioning coalition, you need to make sure that no one walks out of talks looking like a loser. That's difficult enough with two, but it becomes even more difficult when you have three partners."[69] Oltermann posited that The Left could see entering federal government as "a final chance to reverse the party's decline, even if it means moving some of its red lines of old."[69]

In its election manifesto, The Left called for abolishing NATO in favour of a "collective security system with Russia's involvement", to which Scholz said that this is an example of minimum criteria to govern which is not negotiable.[71] The Left's lead candidates stated that those demands are a tribute to the party's historic anti-imperialist roots rather than reflecting ambitions to govern at the federal level and a discussion on the future of NATO is also being led by centrists such as France's Emmanuel Macron.[69] The party struck the anti-NATO demand from its immediate policy measures and Janine Wissler responded that foreign policy was more than NATO.[72] Gregor Gysi, a member of the left wing of the party, stated that such demands are more of a vision, are not to be implemented as soon as possible, and should not be seen as inflexible preconditions for a left-wing coalition.[73]

As significant issues remain, attempts among willing delegates from both parties have been made over the years on how such issues could be solved in a coalition; the solution of an internal vote preceding foreign policies votes, such as foreign deployments, on a case-by-case analysis was deemed to be unworkable by many in the SPD. The Greens see foreign policy differences with The Left as big as financial and debt disagreements with the FDP.[69] The Left joining the federal government would have broken a taboo due to being a democratic successor of East Germany's ruling party, and for its pacifist and anti-militarist stance,[69] and could be seen as following examples in Spain and Sweden.[74] A traffic light coalition (SPD–FDP–Greens) was seen as the more likely scenario but a R2G coalition, which would be favoured by the left-wing leadership[73] and rank-and-file party members,[72] was not excluded if coalition talks with FDP fail due minimum wage increase or the wealth tax.[69]

Debates

Armin Laschet vs. Annalena Baerbock vs. Olaf Scholz

For the first time since 2002, the four major television broadcasters ARD, ZDF, RTL, and ProSieben/Sat.1 did not hold a joint television debate. Separate debates were previously prevented by incumbent chancellor Merkel, who did not run for reelection. For the first time in history, three-way major debates were held, as the Greens were invited after overtaking the SPD in opinion polls.[75]

2021 German federal election debates
Date Broadcasters  P  Present   S  Surrogate   I  Invited   NI  Not invited  
CDU SPD Grüne AfD FDP Linke CSU
17 May 2021[76] RBB Fernsehen NI P
Scholz
P
Baerbock
NI NI NI NI
20 May 2021[77] WDR, tagesschau24 P
Laschet
P
Scholz
P
Baerbock
NI NI NI NI
26 June 2021[78] tagesschau24 P
Laschet
P
Scholz
P
Baerbock
NI NI NI NI
29 August 2021[79] RTL, n-tv P
Laschet
P
Scholz
P
Baerbock
NI NI NI NI
30 August 2021[80] ZDF S
Spahn
S
Giffey
S
Göring-Eckardt
P
Weidel
P
Lindner
P
Bartsch
P
Dobrindt
12 September 2021[75] Das Erste, ZDF P
Laschet
P
Scholz
P
Baerbock
NI NI NI NI
13 September 2021[81] ZDF NI NI NI P
Weidel
S
Kubicki
P
Wissler
S
Blume
13 September[82] Das Erste NI NI NI P
Weidel
P
Lindner
P
Wissler
P
Dobrindt
19 September 2021[83] ProSieben, Sat.1, Kabel eins P
Laschet
P
Scholz
P
Baerbock
NI NI NI NI
23 September 2021[75] Das Erste, ZDF P
Laschet
P
Scholz
P
Baerbock
P
Weidel
P
Lindner
P
Wissler
P
Söder

Members of Parliament standing down

AfD

CDU/CSU

SPD

FDP

Greens

The Left

Independents

Opinion polls

 
Local regression of polls conducted

Poll trackers

Trackers of voting intentions and other election-related polling:

  • Europe Elects
  • The Economist
  • The Guardian – includes breakdown of hypothetical coalition governments
  • New Statesman – includes polling of German voters' preferred chancellor and the issues they prioritise as well as a breakdown of hypothetical coalition governments
  • Politico

Results

Although the vote share of the South Schleswig Voters' Association (0.12%) was well below the 5% electoral threshold, due to its status of being representative of a recognised minority group (Danes and Frisians), an exception in federal law allowed the party to win one party-list seat.

PartyParty-listConstituencyTotal
seats
+/–
Votes%SeatsVotes%Seats
Social Democratic Party11,955,43425.748512,234,69026.39121206+53
Christian Democratic Union8,775,47118.905410,451,52422.5498152−48
Alliance 90/The Greens6,852,20614.751026,469,08113.9516118+51
Free Democratic Party5,319,95211.46924,042,9518.72092+12
Alternative for Germany4,803,90210.34674,695,61110.131683−11
Christian Social Union2,402,8275.1702,788,0486.014545−1
The Left2,270,9064.89362,307,5364.98339−30
Free Voters1,127,7842.4301,334,7392.88000
Human Environment Animal Protection675,3531.450163,2010.35000
Grassroots Democratic Party630,1531.360735,4511.5900New
Die PARTEI461,5700.990543,1451.17000
Team Todenhöfer214,5350.4605,7000.0100New
Pirate Party Germany169,9230.37060,8390.13000
Volt Germany165,4740.36078,3390.1700New
Ecological Democratic Party112,3140.240152,7920.33000
National Democratic Party64,5740.1401,0900.00000
South Schleswig Voters' Association55,5780.12135,0270.0801+1
Partei für Gesundheitsforschung49,3490.1102,8420.01000
Party of Humanists47,7110.10012,7300.03000
Alliance C – Christians for Germany39,8680.0906,2220.01000
Bavaria Party32,7900.07036,7480.08000
V-Partei331,8840.07010,6440.02000
Independents for Citizen-oriented Democracy22,7360.05013,4210.03000
The Greys19,4430.0402,3680.01000
Die Urbane. Eine HipHop Partei17,8110.0401,9120.00000
Marxist–Leninist Party17,7990.04022,5340.05000
German Communist Party14,9250.0305,4460.01000
Alliance for Human Rights, Animal and Nature Protection13,6720.0307,3710.02000
European Party Love12,9670.0308730.0000New
Liberal Conservative Reformers11,1590.02010,7670.0200New
Lobbyists for Children9,1890.0200New
Third Way7,8320.0205150.0000New
Garden Party7,6110.0202,0950.00000
Citizens' Movement7,4910.0201,5560.0000New
Democracy in Motion7,1840.0202,6090.01000
Human World3,7860.0106560.00000
The Pinks/Alliance 213,4880.0103770.0000New
Party of Progress3,2280.0100New
Socialist Equality Party1,4170.00000
Bürgerrechtsbewegung Solidarität7270.0008110.00000
Klimaliste Baden-Württemberg3,9670.0100New
Family Party1,8170.00000
Democracy by Referendum1,0860.00000
Grey Panthers9610.0000New
Thuringian Homeland Party5490.0000New
The Others2560.0000New
Bergpartei, die "ÜberPartei"2220.00000
Independents and voter groups110,8940.24000
Total46,442,023100.0043746,362,013100.00299736+27
Valid votes46,442,02399.1246,362,01398.95
Invalid/blank votes412,4850.88492,4951.05
Total votes46,854,508100.0046,854,508100.00
Registered voters/turnout61,181,07276.5861,181,07276.58
Source: Bundeswahlleiter

Results by state

Party list vote share by state[191]
State SPD Union Grüne FDP AfD Linke Others
  Schleswig-Holstein 28.0 22.0 18.3 12.5 6.8 3.6 8.7
  Mecklenburg-Vorpommern 29.1 17.4 7.8 8.2 18.0 11.1 8.4
  Hamburg 29.7 15.4 24.9 11.4 5.0 6.7 6.9
  Lower Saxony 33.1 24.2 16.1 10.5 7.4 3.3 5.4
  Bremen 31.5 17.2 20.9 9.3 6.9 7.7 6.4
  Brandenburg 29.5 15.3 9.0 9.3 18.1 8.5 10.3
  Saxony-Anhalt 25.4 21.0 6.5 9.5 19.6 9.6 8.4
  Berlin 23.4 15.9 22.4 9.1 8.4 11.4 9.5
  North Rhine-Westphalia 29.1 26.0 16.1 11.4 7.3 3.7 6.5
  Saxony 19.3 17.2 8.6 11.0 24.6 9.3 9.9
  Hesse 27.6 22.8 15.8 12.8 8.8 4.3 7.9
  Thuringia 23.4 16.9 6.6 9.0 24.0 11.4 8.7
  Rhineland-Palatinate 29.4 24.7 12.6 11.7 9.2 3.3 9.2
  Bavaria 18.0 31.7 14.1 10.5 9.0 2.8 13.9
  Baden-Württemberg 21.6 24.8 17.2 15.3 9.6 3.3 8.2
  Saarland 37.3 23.6 11.5 10.0 7.2 10.5

Constituency seats

State Total
seats
Seats won
SPD CDU CSU Grüne AfD Linke
Baden-Württemberg 38 1 33 4
Bavaria 46 45 1
Berlin 12 4 3 3 2
Brandenburg 10 10
Bremen 2 2
Hamburg 6 4 2
Hesse 22 14 7 1
Lower Saxony 30 22 8
Mecklenburg-Vorpommern 6 6
North Rhine-Westphalia 64 30 30 4
Rhineland-Palatinate 15 8 7
Saarland 4 4
Saxony 16 1 4 10 1
Saxony-Anhalt 9 4 3 2
Schleswig-Holstein 11 8 2 1
Thuringia 8 3 1 4
Total 299 121 98 45 16 16 3

List seats

State Total
seats
Seats won
Grüne FDP SPD AfD CDU Linke SSW
Baden-Württemberg 64 14 16 21 10 3
Bavaria 71 18 14 23 12 4
Berlin 17 4 3 3 3 2 2
Brandenburg 15 2 2 5 4 2
Bremen 3 1 1 1
Hamburg 10 2 2 1 1 3 1
Hesse 28 8 7 1 5 5 2
Lower Saxony 43 13 8 3 6 10 3
Mecklenburg-Vorpommern 10 1 1 3 3 2
North Rhine-Westphalia 91 23 19 19 12 12 6
Rhineland-Palatinate 21 5 5 4 4 2 1
Saarland 5 1 1 2 1
Saxony 22 4 5 7 3 3
Saxony-Anhalt 9 1 2 1 2 1 2
Schleswig-Holstein 17 5 4 2 4 1 1
Thuringia 11 1 2 2 1 2 3
Total 437 102 92 85 67 54 36 1

MPs who lost their seat

10 closest constituencies

Incumbents are denoted in bold and followed by (I).

Constituency State Winner Runner-up Vote difference
Dresden II – Bautzen II Saxony   Lars Rohwer   Andreas Harlaß 35
Südpfalz Rhineland-Palatinate   Thomas Hitschler   Thomas Gebhart (I) 41
Steinburg – Dithmarschen Süd Schleswig-Holstein   Mark Helfrich (I)   Karin Thissen 52
Emmendingen – Lahr Baden-Württemberg   Peter Weiß   Johannes Fechner 90
Munich West/Centre Bavaria   Stephan Pilsinger (I)   Dieter Janecek 137
Mansfeld Saxony-Anhalt   Robert Farle   Torsten Schweiger (I) 198
Bonn North Rhine-Westphalia   Katrin Uhlig   Jessica Rosenthal 216
Leipzig-Land Saxony   Edgar Naujok   Georg‑Ludwig von Breitenbuch 282
Burgenland – Saalekreis Saxony-Anhalt   Dieter Stier (I)   Martin Reichardt 321
Hamburg-Eimsbüttel Hamburg   Till Steffen   Niels Annen (I) 359

Irregularities in Berlin

 
The many postal ballot papers at Berlin-Charlottenburg-Wilmersdorf

In Berlin, vote casting and counting was not simple as the election was the same day as not only the Berlin Marathon, but the Berlin state election and a local referendum. The Federal Returning Officer felt compelled to request a report from the State Returning Officer Petra Michaelis.[192]

In some polling stations ballot papers were missing or ran out and could not be delivered on the same day due to the Berlin marathon. Ballot papers (of which there were 115 different variants in Berlin) and postal voting documents were also swapped. Many votes were cast long after the official end of voting at 6 p.m, the last after 8 p.m. when the outcome was already being forecast.[193] At least one polling station was closed due to missing documents.[194]

In at least 16 Berlin polling stations, basic election data did not match (including impossible voter turnouts of over 100%).[195]

On 29 September 2021, Michaelis announced her resignation and that of her deputy.[196]

Analysis and aftermath

 
Party affiliation of winning candidates by constituency
 
Results of the party list vote by state
 
List seats by state
Sociology of the electorate
Demographic SPD Union Grüne FDP AfD Linke Free Voters Others
Total vote 25.7% 24.1% 14.8% 11.5% 10.3% 4.9% 2.4% 6.3%
Sex
Men 25% 24% 14% 13% 12% 5% 2% 5%
Women 27% 24% 16% 10% 8% 5% 2% 8%
Age
18–24 years old 15% 10% 23% 21% 7% 8% 3% 13%
25–34 years old 17% 14% 21% 15% 12% 7% 3% 13%
35–44 years old 20% 19% 18% 12% 15% 5% 3% 8%
45–59 years old 26% 23% 16% 12% 12% 4% 3% 4%
60–69 years old 32% 28% 12% 9% 10% 4% 2% 3%
70 or older 35% 38% 7% 8% 5% 4% 1% 2%
Socio-occupational classification
Unemployed 23% 14% 17% 8% 17% 11% 3% 7%
Blue-collar worker 26% 20% 8% 9% 21% 5% 3% 8%
White-collar worker 24% 20% 17% 13% 11% 5% 3% 7%
Self-employed 16% 26% 16% 19% 9% 5% 3% 6%
Retired 35% 34% 10% 7% 7% 4% 2% 3%
Source: Infratest dimap[197]

SPD

The SPD had their best result since 2005 at 25%; it was also the first time since 2002 that they emerged as the largest party in the Bundestag. For the first time since 2002, the SPD swept all single-member constituency seats in the states of Brandenburg and Saarland, where they defeated cabinet ministers Peter Altmaier and Annegret Kramp-Karrenbauer.[198] They also won all constituencies in Mecklenburg-Vorpommern for the first time, including Vorpommern-Rügen – Vorpommern-Greifswald I, the seat of outgoing chancellor Angela Merkel.[199] It is also the first time they won any single-member constituency seats in Saxony-Anhalt and Thuringia since 2005.[200][201][202]

The SPD had been written off by many political observers due to longtime internal quarrels[203][204] and poor performances in prior elections, even those in early 2021. In the 2019 European Parliament election, they dropped to a historic low 15.8%, accelerating the decline of already deeply embattled and unpopular leader Andrea Nahles.[205] When the unpopular and little-known SPD leaders[206] Norbert Walter-Borjans and Saskia Esken nominated moderate Olaf Scholz, whom they had unexpectedly defeated in the 2019 leadership election, as Chancellor candidate in August 2020,[207] they were widely mocked.[208] The SPD sat at a distant third place in the polls and stayed there until their sudden surge late in the campaign.

However, even at their historic poll lows around 14%, Olaf Scholz had a significantly higher personal approval rating than both his party and the other Chancellor candidates Laschet and Baerbock.[209] After the extreme personal unpopularity, resulting from gaffes and scandal, meant that first Baerbock and then Laschet floundered, the SPD surprisingly took the lead, for the first time since early 2017, in the final stretches of the election campaign. This surprising surge also meant that some "paper candidates", a lot of them young, were unexpectedly elected to the Bundestag, for example Jan Plobner, Jakob Blankenburg or Fabian Funke.

That being said, the surge and eventual outcome of the election was mainly decided by older voters, who switched from the CDU/CSU to the SPD,[210] which some attributed to Scholz being very similar in his calm and moderate leadership style to incumbent Angela Merkel.[211]

CDU/CSU

The CDU/CSU had their worst result ever by far, eclipsing the previous worst of 31% in 1949. Many prominent politicians were defeated in their single-member constituency seats, including ministers Altmaier, Helge Braun, Kramp-Karrenbauer, and Julia Klöckner as well as Hans-Georg Maaßen and Philipp Amthor, though all of them except Maaßen were still elected to the Bundestag via their respective state party lists.[212][h] There was speculation that chancellor candidate Armin Laschet would lose election to the Bundestag;[213] he was placed first on the North Rhine-Westphalia party list, and if the CDU gained overhang seats, that list would not be used. Due to the CDU's bad performance in terms of single-member constituency seats, Laschet was elected to the Bundestag.[214] The first time since 2005 that they did not win all single-member constituency seats in Bavaria, the CSU also had their worst result in history.[215]

Reasons given for the catastrophic defeat were corruption scandals of several CDU/CSU politicians in spring 2021,[216] some minor allegations even being brought against Laschet himself.[217] In addition, Laschet was suffering from extreme personal unpopularity,[218] even in his own state.[219] Laschet did not have the incumbency advantage that helped moderately popular Merkel to win re-election three times, but still had to run on Merkel's legacy in voters minds. This meant that the otherwise popular CDU/CSU platform of increasing digitization, reducing bureaucracy and moderate climate action were not taken seriously as his party had not addressed them in sixteen years of government in the minds of many voters.[220] In one infamous campaign moment, Laschet spoke of a "Wind of Change" in his closing statement in the first three way debate,[221] which was widely ridiculed.[222] The contentious decision to have him run as CDU/CSU candidate instead of the much more popular CSU leader Markus Söder by the CDU establishment also played into this.[223] During the belligerent internal selection process in spring, polls showed Söder faring a lot better than Laschet in the election, often higher than the 2017 result, and Söder was the preferred candidate of the base and the public at large.[224] Even fairly late into the election campaign, 70% of CDU/CSU supporters wanted to replace Laschet with Söder.[225] Söder publicly supported and defended Laschet, even on election night,[226] but was accused of backstabbing Laschet's candidacy[227] in order to become chancellor candidate in 2025.

Laschet took responsibility for the result, but initially refused to resign in hopes of becoming Chancellor through a Jamaica coalition. The ensuing talks were plagued by leaks damaging Laschet[228] and after Söder prematurely declared the talks to be over,[229] both Greens and FDP decided to enter coalition talks with the SPD instead.[230] After intense pressure from his party and the public, Laschet announced on 8 October 2021 that he would step down but would moderate the next CDU leadership election.[231] That leadership contest was the first to be decided by party members, who overwhelmingly chose conservative outsider Friedrich Merz in December 2021, after he failed in the previous two leadership elections, to Annegret Kramp-Karrenbauer in 2018 and Laschet in January 2021. This was seen as a rebuttal to the party establishment, that backed Kramp-Karrenbauer and Laschet, both seen as being more moderate, aligned in both policy positions and leadership style to Angela Merkel.

Greens

The Greens got their best result in history, nearly doubling from 2017. This is also the first federal election in which they won single-member constituency seats outside of Berlin-Friedrichshain-Kreuzberg – Prenzlauer Berg East; however, expectations for them were a lot higher, with them polling at over 20% in the summer and peaking at around 25%, having briefly overtaken the CDU in April and May.[232][233] Their slump in the polls was largely attributed to a number of gaffes from and the personal unpopularity of Annalena Baerbock,[234] though polls show that a lot of Green voters migrated to the SPD in the final weeks of the campaign to ensure the CDU would not form government.[235]

Though she won in the party-list, Baerbock lost in Potsdam – Potsdam-Mittelmark II – Teltow-Fläming II to SPD's Olaf Scholz by a large margin.[236] In addition, though the Greens won 16 single-member constituency seats, all of them except Flensburg – Schleswig, the constituency of future Vice Chancellor Robert Habeck, were entirely urban constituencies.

The Greens were also disqualified from running on the Saarland state list due to irregularities in the selection of list candidates.[237] The Greens had, however, won only one seat in the Saarland in the previous two federal elections.

FDP

The FDP had their second best showing since German reunification, gaining a few seats to maintain its fourth-place position.[238] This was enough to make it a kingmaker alongside the Greens in coalition talks.[239]

Like the Greens, they did well with young voters; among first-time voters, they received the highest vote share of 23%.[240] In addition, while they only marginally improved their result in the West German states, their more significant increase in support in former East Germany amounted to their best performance there in the party's history.

AfD

The AfD lost seats and went from the third largest to the fifth largest party in the Bundestag; however, they performed strongly in former East Germany, where they won 16 single-member constituency seats in Saxony, Saxony-Anhalt, and Thuringia.[241][242] While the AfD lost vote share in Saxony, the stronger losses of the CDU still allowed them to place ahead of the CDU, becoming the most voted party in Saxony. They also won the most party list votes in Thuringia, though only by 0.6%.

Reasons given for their drop in support include far less media attention, largely due to the open Chancellor's race, and large swaths of Anti-lockdown and Anti-vaccination voters, which the AfD campaigned hard on, voting for dieBasis and Free Voters. Leader of the AfD in the Bundestag Alice Weidel was widely ridiculed for claiming on election night that they surpassed their 2017 result if one added the results for dieBasis and Free Voters.[243][244]

The Left

The Left had their worst showing since 2002, when it was the Party of Democratic Socialism, slumping from 69 seats in 2017 to just 39. While they fell just short of the election threshold they won at least three single-member constituency seats (two in their stronghold in the former East Berlin, down from four, and one in Saxony), entitling them to proportional representation in the Bundestag according to their second votes.[245] Under a longstanding electoral law intended to benefit parties with regional appeal (as is the case with the Left in the old East Germany), any party that wins at least three constituency seats is entitled to its share of proportionally-elected seats, regardless of vote share.[246]

Apart from this symbolic defeat, their preferred government, a left-wing red–red–green coalition,[247] does not have a majority in the Bundestag,[248] and the German financial market rallied as a result.[249][250] Vice President of the Bundestag Petra Pau lost her single-member constituency of Berlin-Marzahn-Hellersdorf by a large margin.[251] The seat had been held by The Left and its predecessor parties since the 1990 federal election.

Reasons given for the massive slump were public quarrels in the party.[252][253] This included feuds surrounding the position on Afghanistan,[254] the former leader Oskar Lafontaine, who advised voting against his party in the Saarland due to alleged fraud,[255] and popular figure Sahra Wagenknecht, who some in the party wanted to expel for her book "Die Selbstgerechten" in which she harshly criticizes, among other things, "Wokeness" within her party.[256] These public feuds intensified after the election,[257] for example, the convicted former head of government of East Germany Hans Modrow, who chairs The Left's "council of elders", denounced the party.[258]

Ethnic minorities

In terms of representation of ethnic minorities, one source suggested that the Bundestag would have 24 new MPs with "Balkan" ancestry. Its list included, however, largely people of Turkish ancestry who mostly have roots in Anatolia.[259] The South Schleswig Voters' Association (SSW), a regionalist party only contesting Schleswig-Holstein representing the Danish and Frisian minorities in Southern Schleswig, won their first seat, becoming the first regionalist party to win seats since 1953.[260] Recognized minority parties are exempt from the threshold of 5%, which is how the SSW won a seat with 0.1% of the vote nationwide.[i] The SSW last contested in 1961 and last won a seat in 1949.[261] They named a felt discrimination of Northern Germany as reason for them contesting the election.[262] Stefan Seidler was seated as their Member of the German Bundestag.[263] Seidler was offered to sit in the SPD parliamentary group as a guest by their leader Rolf Mützenich, but declined.[264]

Minor parties

Minor parties did exceptionally well in the 2021 election. The left-wing satire party Die PARTEI had their best result ever, as did the Animal Protection Party and the regionalist Free Voters, which doubled their result and received 7.5% in Bavaria, where they take part in the state government. A few new minor parties emerged in the 2021 election, the most notable being the Anti-lockdown and Anti-vaccination dieBasis party, which received between 1 and 1.9%. Team Todenhöfer, founded in 2020 by notorious former CDU Member of the German Bundestag Jürgen Todenhöfer, also first contested the 2021 election, running on Anti-militarism and receiving support from pro-Palestinian groups, but only garnered 0.5% of the vote. The 2021 election also accelerated the decline of the far-right National Democratic Party, which only got 0.1% of the vote. The NPD was at a time the most successful minor/fringe party, getting 1.6% in 2005 and entering various state parliaments in former East Germany.

Government formation

A three-party governing coalition, with the FDP and the Greens joining either the SPD or CDU/CSU, was discussed as a likely outcome.[265][266] While the grand coalition of the CDU/CSU and SPD could have been renewed, numerous representatives of both the CDU/CSU and the SPD ruled out this option before the federal election,[267] during the campaign,[268][269] and after.[270][271] On election night, SPD leader Scholz reiterated his goal to form a government, citing the fact that his party emerged as the largest in parliament.[272] He expressed his intention to become chancellor and his preference for a traffic light coalition with the FDP and the Greens.[273] Leading figures in the CDU/CSU such as Michael Kretschmer stated that since the CDU/CSU was knocked down to second place, it should not form the government.[274] The FDP and the Greens, having won 210 seats between them, announced that they would talk separately before deciding on whom to support as a senior coalition partner.[275] The Greens and the FDP held discussions for two days after the election.[276] On 7 October, the two parties met with the SPD for the first round of exploratory talks,[277] with a second round on 11 October.[278] On 15 October, the SPD agreed to more ambitious climate targets, as pledged by the Greens.[279] On 17 October, the Greens voted to enter formal coalition talks with the SPD and FDP.[280] The next day, the FDP voted to do the same.[281] The 20th Bundestag was officially sworn in on 26 October.[282]

On 16 November, the general secretaries of the three traffic light coalition parties (SPD, FDP, Greens) announced that an agreement document was almost complete, with Scholz to become Chancellor, and that the details would be issued some time in the next week.[283] On 23 November, an agreement for a traffic light coalition was finalised.[284] The three parties announced a number of policies, including plans to phase out coal energy by 2030, eight years ahead of the previous target, as well as lower the federal voting age to 16 years, raise the minimum wage to €12 per hour, and lower barriers to acquiring German citizenship. Annalena Baerbock will become foreign minister, while Robert Habeck will head a new "super ministry" with responsibility for climate, energy, and economy. Christian Lindner will become finance minister.[285][286] The SPD convention voted 98.8% in favour of approving the agreement on 4 December,[287] followed by the FDP with 92.4% on 5 December.[288] The results of the Greens membership ballot were announced on 6 December, with 86% voting to approve the coalition.[289] Scholz was elected as Chancellor by the Bundestag on 8 December,[290][j] with 395 votes of 707 cast, with 303 votes against.[294]

Notes

  1. ^ a b Annalena Baerbock and Robert Habeck were co-lead candidates, while Baerbock was candidate for Chancellor.
  2. ^ The Greens were disqualified from running on the Saarland state list due to irregularities in the selection of list candidates.[1]
  3. ^ Parties winning one or two single-member constituencies retain those single-member constituency seats but do not win any proportional seats. This has happened in the 2002 German federal election, where the PDS won two single-member constituencies in the state of Berlin, while failing the electoral threshold with 4.0% of second votes received. Subsequently, the party was represented with two seats in the 15th Bundestag.
  4. ^ In the 1949 West German federal election, the threshold and waiver applied on a statewide level. In the 1953 West German federal election, only one single-member constituency was required for the waiver, benefiting the Centre Party and the German Party.
  5. ^ In Germany, many holidays are determined on state level and therefore do not apply for all Germans. Federal holidays are New Year's Day, Good Friday, Easter Monday, Labour Day, Ascension Day, Whit Monday, German Unity Day, First Christmas Day, and Second Christmas Day (Boxing Day).
  6. ^ CSU received 38.8% in Bavaria. It only fields candidates in Bavaria, where the CDU does not field candidates.
  7. ^ The South Schleswig Voters' Association is a recognised minority party representing the Danish and Frisian minorities of Southern Schleswig, and is exempt from the 5% electoral threshold in Germany.[35]
  8. ^ Kramp-Karrenbauer and Altmaier renounced their mandate on 8 October, meaning they will not take their seat at the start of the new Bundestag.
  9. ^ Seat are apportioned on a state level; the SSW won 3,2% of the vote in Schleswig-Holstein.
  10. ^ During the government formation talks, Angela Merkel headed a caretaker government after the Fourth Merkel cabinet was formally dismissed by the President of Germany on 26 October 2021;[291] had the new government not taken office by 17 December, Merkel would have overtaken Helmut Kohl as the longest-serving chancellor since Otto von Bismarck.[292][293]

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2021, german, federal, election, federal, elections, were, held, germany, september, 2021, elect, members, 20th, bundestag, state, elections, berlin, mecklenburg, vorpommern, were, also, held, incumbent, chancellor, angela, merkel, first, elected, 2005, chose,. Federal elections were held in Germany on 26 September 2021 to elect the members of the 20th Bundestag State elections in Berlin and Mecklenburg Vorpommern were also held Incumbent chancellor Angela Merkel first elected in 2005 chose not to run again marking the first time that an incumbent Chancellor of the Federal Republic of Germany has not sought re election 2021 German federal election 2017 26 September 2021 2021 09 26 Next outgoing memberselected members All 736 seats in the Bundestag including 138 overhang and leveling seats369 seats needed for a majorityOpinion pollsRegistered61 181 072 0 8 Turnout46 854 508 76 6 0 4pp First party Second party Third party Candidate Olaf Scholz Armin Laschet Annalena Baerbock a Party SPD CDU CSU GreensLast election 20 5 153 seats 32 9 246 seats 8 9 67 seatsSeats won 206 197 118Seat change 53 49 51Popular vote 11 955 434 11 178 298 6 852 206Percentage 25 7 24 1 14 8 b Swing 5 2pp 8 8pp 5 9pp Fourth party Fifth party Sixth party Candidate Christian Lindner Alice Weidel amp Tino Chrupalla Janine Wissler amp Dietmar BartschParty FDP AfD LeftLast election 10 7 80 seats 12 6 94 seats 9 2 69 seatsSeats won 92 83 39Seat change 12 11 30Popular vote 5 319 952 4 803 902 2 270 906Percentage 11 5 10 3 4 9 Swing 0 8pp 2 3pp 4 3ppThe left side shows constituency winners of the election by their party colours The right side shows party list winners of the election for the additional members by their party colours Government before electionFourth Merkel cabinetCDU CSU SPD Government after election Scholz cabinetSPD Green FDPWith 25 7 of total votes the Social Democratic Party of Germany SPD recorded their best result since 2005 and emerged as the largest party for the first time since 2002 The ruling CDU CSU which had led a grand coalition with the SPD since 2013 recorded their worst ever result with 24 1 a significant decline from 32 9 in 2017 Alliance 90 The Greens achieved their best result in history at 14 8 while the Free Democratic Party FDP made small gains and finished on 11 5 The Alternative for Germany AfD fell from third to fifth place with 10 3 a decline of 2 3 percentage points The Left suffered their worst showing since their official formation in 2007 failing to cross the 5 electoral threshold by just over one tenth of a percentage point The party was nonetheless entitled to full proportional representation as it won three direct constituencies With a fifth grand coalition being dismissed by both the CDU CSU and the SPD the FDP and the Greens were considered kingmakers On 23 November following complex coalition talks the SPD FDP and Greens formalized an agreement to form a traffic light coalition which was approved by all three parties Olaf Scholz and his cabinet were elected by the Bundestag on 8 December Contents 1 Background 1 1 2017 federal election and government formation 1 2 Party leadership changes and political instability 2 Electoral system 2 1 Date assignment process 2 2 Observers and false claims of voter fraud 3 Political parties and candidates 3 1 Lead candidates 3 2 Competing parties 3 3 Registration of candidates 4 Campaign 4 1 Major issues 4 2 Red red green coalition 4 3 Debates 5 Members of Parliament standing down 5 1 AfD 5 2 CDU CSU 5 3 SPD 5 4 FDP 5 5 Greens 5 6 The Left 5 7 Independents 6 Opinion polls 6 1 Poll trackers 7 Results 7 1 Results by state 7 1 1 Constituency seats 7 1 2 List seats 7 2 MPs who lost their seat 7 3 10 closest constituencies 7 4 Irregularities in Berlin 8 Analysis and aftermath 8 1 SPD 8 2 CDU CSU 8 3 Greens 8 4 FDP 8 5 AfD 8 6 The Left 8 7 Ethnic minorities 8 8 Minor parties 9 Government formation 10 Notes 11 References 12 External linksBackground Edit2017 federal election and government formation Edit Main article 2017 German federal election The 2017 federal election was held after a four year grand coalition between the CDU CSU and the SPD Though the CDU CSU remained the biggest parliamentary group both it and the SPD suffered significant losses The SPD leadership recognising the party s unsatisfactory performance after four years in government announced that it would go into opposition 2 With the CDU CSU having pledged not to work with either the AfD or The Left before the federal election the only remaining option for a majority government was a Jamaica coalition consisting of the CDU CSU FDP and the Greens 3 4 Exploratory talks between the parties were held over the next six weeks though the FDP withdrew from the negotiations on 20 November citing irreconcilable differences between the parties on migration and energy policies 5 6 Chancellor Angela Merkel consulted with President Frank Walter Steinmeier who implored all parties to reconsider in order to avoid fresh elections 7 8 The SPD and their leader Martin Schulz indicated their willingness to enter into discussions for another coalition government with the CDU CSU 9 The SPD leadership voted to enter into exploratory discussion on 15 December 2017 10 and at a party congress in January 2018 a majority of the party s delegates voted to support the coalition talks 11 12 The text of the final agreement was agreed to by the CDU CSU and the SPD on 7 February though was conditioned on the approval of a majority of the SPD s party membership 13 The 463 723 members of the SPD voted to approve or reject the deal from 20 February to 2 March 14 15 with the result announced on 4 March A total of 78 39 of members cast valid votes of which 66 02 voted in favor of another grand coalition 16 Merkel was voted in by the Bundestag for a fourth term as chancellor on 14 March with 364 votes for 315 against 9 abstentions and 4 invalid votes just 9 more votes than the 355 needed for a majority 17 The new government was officially referred to as the Fourth Merkel cabinet 18 19 Party leadership changes and political instability Edit Merkel s final government was subject to intense instability The 2018 German government crisis saw the longstanding alliance between the CDU and CSU threaten to split over asylum seeker policy Interior Minister and CSU leader Horst Seehofer threatened to undercut Merkel s authority by closing German borders for asylum seekers registered in another European Union EU country The split eventually repaired following a summit with EU countries threatened to bring down the government 20 Following his party s historically low result in the 2018 Bavarian state election Seehofer was replaced as CSU leader by new Bavarian Minister President Markus Soder at a party conference in January 2019 while he retained his position as Interior Minister in the Fourth Merkel cabinet 21 In October 2018 Merkel announced that she would resign as leader of the CDU at the party s conference in December 2018 and step down as Chancellor of Germany at the forthcoming election following poor results at state elections for the CSU in Bavaria and for the CDU in Hesse 22 23 Merkel s allegedly preferred candidate for the party leadership Annegret Kramp Karrenbauer narrowly defeated Friedrich Merz who had been a rival of Merkel around 2002 and had left politics in 2009 criticising her decisions and leadership 24 Kramp Karrenbauer struggled to unify the party s liberal and conservative factions and in February 2020 when she failed to lead the Thuringia state CDU towards a solution of the government crisis there she announced her intention to withdraw her interest in running as the CDU nominee for chancellor at the election and step down as party leader 25 A party convention to elect a new leader was scheduled for April but was repeatedly delayed due to the COVID 19 pandemic The election was held in January 2021 with Armin Laschet incumbent Minister President of North Rhine Westphalia winning with 52 8 of delegate votes Merz was his main opponent at 47 2 26 The other party in the coalition government the SPD also had leadership instability Following their worst general election result since 1945 at the beginning of the new government the party elected Andrea Nahles as their leader in April 2018 Nahles had already been elected leader of the SPD parliamentary group after the federal election in September when the party still planned to go into opposition 27 28 She was unsuccessful in improving the party s stock with the electorate as it continued to slide in opinion polls and was for the first time in history well beaten by the centre left party Alliance 90 The Greens at the 2019 European Parliament election She resigned on 2 June 2019 precipitating a leadership election for the SPD 29 Progressive candidates Norbert Walter Borjans and Saskia Esken defeated the more moderate candidates Olaf Scholz and Klara Geywitz and were elected co leaders by the party s membership Their election raised prospects of the coalition government collapsing and early elections being called although Reuters reported that the duo would seek to achieve agreement from the CDU CSU on increasing public spending rather than allow the government to collapse 30 In August 2020 the party appointed Merkel s deputy Vice Chancellor Scholz as its candidate for chancellor at the election despite him having lost to Walter Borjans and Esken in the party leadership election 31 Cem Ozdemir and Simone Peter stood down as co leaders of the Greens after the failed Jamaica negotiations and Annalena Baerbock and Robert Habeck were elected as their successors in January 2018 Dissatisfaction with the SPD and the federal government saw a rise in Greens polling numbers throughout 2018 They scored record results in the Bavarian and Hessian state elections in October and subsequently surpassed the SPD in public opinion settling in second behind the CDU CSU for the next three years The party had its best ever showings at the 2019 European Parliament election 2020 Hamburg state election and 2021 Baden Wurttemberg state election They briefly polled in first place during two brief periods first after the 2019 European Parliament election and again after the nomination of chancellor candidates in April 2021 32 The Left also underwent a change in leadership with Katja Kipping and Bernd Riexinger stepping down after nine years as party co leaders They were succeeded by Janine Wissler and Susanne Hennig Wellsow at a party conference held digitally on 27 February 2021 Wissler is considered a member of the party s left wing formerly aligned with the Socialist Left faction while Hennig Wellsow is considered a moderate and part of the party s pragmatic wing Both support their party s participation in federal government particularly Hennig Wellsow who played a major role in the red red green coalition government of The Left the SPD and the Greens in the state of Thuringia 33 Electoral system EditFurther information Elections in Germany and Politics of Germany Germany uses the mixed member proportional representation system a system of proportional representation combined with elements of first past the post voting The Bundestag has 598 nominal members elected for a four year term these seats are distributed between the sixteen German states in proportion to the states number of eligible voters 34 Each voter can cast two votes a constituency vote first vote and a party list vote second vote Based solely on the first votes 299 members are elected in single member constituencies by first past the post voting The second votes are used to produce a proportional number of seats for parties first in the states and then in the Bundestag Seats are allocated using the Sainte Lague method If a party wins fewer constituency seats in a state than its second votes would entitle it to it receives additional seats from the relevant state list Parties can file lists in every single state under certain conditions such as a fixed number of supporting signatures Parties can receive second votes only in those states in which they have filed a state list 34 If a party by winning single member constituencies in one state receives more seats than it would be entitled to according to its second vote share in that state the excess seats become known as overhang seats to avoid negative vote weight those overhang seats are compensated for in the other states restoring proportionality according to second votes cast nationwide 34 To qualify for proportional seat distribution a party must receive more second votes nationwide than the electoral threshold of 5 This requirement is waived for parties winning at least three single member constituencies c As result of this waiver d parties have benefited on three occasions such as the DP in the 1957 West German federal election and the PDS in the 1994 German federal election Parties representing recognized national minorities are exempt from the electoral threshold As of 2021 these minorities are the Danish Frisians Sorbs and Romani people 34 35 Date assignment process Edit The Basic Law for the Federal Republic of Germany and the Federal Election Act provides that federal elections must be held on a Sunday or on a federal holiday e no earlier than 46 and no later than 48 months after the first sitting of the preceding session unless a snap election is called or a state of defence is declared 36 Under this rule the 2021 federal election had to take place on a Sunday between 29 August and 24 October inclusive as the previous 19th Bundestag had held its first sitting on 24 October 2017 37 The President of Germany sets the exact date for the election 38 On 9 December 2020 President Frank Walter Steinmeier ordered the election to be held on 26 September 2021 39 Observers and false claims of voter fraud Edit For the fourth time since 2009 the 2021 federal election was observed by OSCE 40 providing four experts from three OSCE states 41 The Center for Monitoring Analysis and Strategy CeMAS found that false claims of voter fraud had become commonplace on Telegram in Germany with accusations against Dominion Voting Systems being common despite the company s technology not being used in German elections CeMAS researcher Miro Dittrich said We have seen far right actors try to claim election fraud since at least 2016 but it didn t take off When Trump started telling the big lie it became a big issue in Germany sometimes bigger than the pandemic because far right groups and the AfD are carefully monitoring the success Trump is having with this narrative 42 Political parties and candidates EditMain article Candidates of the 2021 German federal election See also List of political parties in Germany The table below lists the parliamentary groups of the 19th Bundestag Name Ideology Leadingcandidate s Leader s 2017 resultVotes SeatsCDU CSU CDU Christian Democratic Union of GermanyChristlich Demokratische Union Deutschlands Christian democracy Armin Laschet Armin Laschet 26 8 246 709CSU Christian Social Union in BavariaChristlich Soziale Union in Bayern Markus Soder 6 2 f SPD Social Democratic Party of GermanySozialdemokratische Partei Deutschlands Social democracy Olaf Scholz Saskia EskenNorbert Walter Borjans 20 5 153 709AfD Alternative for GermanyAlternative fur Deutschland Right wing populism Alice WeidelTino Chrupalla Jorg MeuthenTino Chrupalla 12 6 94 709FDP Free Democratic PartyFreie Demokratische Partei Classical liberalism Christian Lindner Christian Lindner 10 7 80 709Linke The LeftDie Linke Democratic socialism Janine WisslerDietmar Bartsch Janine WisslerSusanne Hennig Wellsow 9 2 69 709Grune Alliance 90 The GreensBundnis 90 Die Grunen Green politics Annalena Baerbock a Robert Habeck Annalena BaerbockRobert Habeck 8 9 67 709Lead candidates Edit After the election of Minister President of North Rhine Westphalia Armin Laschet as federal CDU chairman in January 2021 he became the presumptive CDU nominee for the Union s joint chancellor candidacy Laschet was challenged by Minister President of Bavaria Markus Soder of the CSU who consistently polled well among voters and had been discussed as a potential candidate since mid 2020 43 As the contest intensified in March April 2021 Soder was backed by the CSU as well as some state and local CDU associations while Laschet received the support of most of the CDU The two men failed to come to an agreement by the given deadline of 19 April 44 leading the federal CDU board to hold an impromptu meeting to break the deadlock The board voted 31 to 9 in favour of Laschet 45 After the vote Soder announced his support for Laschet as chancellor candidate 46 On 10 August 2020 the SPD nominated incumbent Vice Chancellor and Finance Minister Olaf Scholz as their lead candidate for the election Scholz who served as Mayor of Hamburg from 2011 to 2018 unsuccessfully sought the SPD leadership in the 2019 leadership election 47 Scholz was formally elected at a party conference on 8 9 May 2021 supported by 96 of delegates 48 The AfD s lead candidates were chosen via a membership vote held from 17 to 24 May 2021 The ticket of party co chairman Tino Chrupalla and Bundestag co leader Alice Weidel were elected with 71 of votes they were opposed by the ticket of former German Air Force lieutenant general Joachim Wundrak and MdB Joana Cotar who won 24 14 815 votes were cast corresponding to a turnout of 48 49 On 21 March 2021 the FDP association in North Rhine Westphalia elected federal chairman Christian Lindner as top candidate for the party list in that state 50 He was re elected as chairman on 14 May winning 93 of votes with no opponent The vote also served to confirm him as lead candidate for the federal election 51 The Left announced Janine Wissler and Dietmar Bartsch as their co lead candidates on 2 May 2021 Wissler was elected federal party co leader earlier in the year alongside Susanne Hennig Wellsow who chose not to seek the co lead candidacy Bartsch had co chaired The Left s Bundestag group since 2015 and was previously co lead candidate in the 2017 federal election 52 Wissler and Bartsch were formally selected by the party executive on 8 9 May receiving 87 of the votes 53 Due to their rise in national opinion polling since 2018 the Greens were expected to forgo the traditional dual lead candidacy in favour of selecting a single chancellor candidate Party co leaders Annalena Baerbock and Robert Habeck were considered the only plausible candidates 54 Baerbock was announced as chancellor candidate on 19 April 55 Both Baerbock and Habeck were co lead candidates for the party s election campaign 56 Competing parties Edit A total of 47 parties and lists were approved to run in the 2021 federal election including the seven which won seats in the 19th Bundestag Of these 40 ran party lists in at least one state while 7 ran only direct candidates In addition 196 independent candidates ran in the various direct constituencies 57 In the table below green shading indicates that the party ran a list in the indicated state The number in each box indicates how many direct candidates the party ran in the indicated state Party StateBW BY BE BB HB HH HE MV NI NW RP SL SN ST SH THChristian Democratic Union of Germany CDU 38 12 10 2 6 22 6 30 64 15 4 16 9 11 8Social Democratic Party of Germany SPD 38 46 12 10 2 6 22 6 30 64 15 4 16 9 11 8Alternative for Germany AfD 38 44 12 10 2 6 22 6 27 63 15 4 16 9 11 8Free Democratic Party FDP 38 46 12 10 2 6 22 6 30 64 15 4 16 9 11 8The Left DIE LINKE 38 45 12 10 2 6 22 6 30 64 14 4 16 9 11 8Alliance 90 The Greens GRUNE 38 46 12 10 2 6 22 6 30 64 15 4 16 9 11 8Christian Social Union in Bavaria CSU 46 Free Voters FREIE WAHLER 38 46 7 9 2 5 21 6 22 57 15 4 12 8 11 6Die PARTEI 33 31 12 9 2 2 9 2 8 52 10 4 11 2 7 7Human Environment Animal Protection Tierschutzpartei 8 6 12 1 1 3 9 3 3 1 National Democratic Party of Germany NPD 1 4 Pirate Party Germany PIRATEN 3 6 6 5 1 2 4 3 8 4 1 3 1Ecological Democratic Party ODP 16 46 10 7 2 5 5 2 9 4 13 1 4V Partei3 Party for Change Vegetarians and Vegans V Partei3 1 11 1 1 1 2 1 Democracy in Motion DiB 6 Bavaria Party BP 24 Animal Protection Alliance Tierschutzallianz 2 Marxist Leninist Party of Germany MLPD 22 9 7 1 2 6 5 4 6 31 1 1 4 2 2 8Party for Health Research Gesundheitsforschung 2 1 German Communist Party DKP 4 1 2 12 1 3 Human World MENSCHLICHE WELT 1 1 The Greys For all Generations Die Grauen 1 Civil Rights Movement Solidarity BuSo 2 5 1 1 Party of Humanists Die Humanisten 10 3 3 1 2 1 1 1 1 3 Garden Party Gartenpartei 1 The Urbans A HipHop Party du 2 1 3 Socialist Equality Party Fourth International SGP Grassroots Democratic Party of Germany dieBasis 36 46 11 10 2 6 21 5 27 60 15 4 16 9 11 7Alliance C Christians for Germany Bundnis C 1 2 4 2 2 Third Way III Weg 1 Citizens Movement for Progress and Change BURGERBEWEGUNG 3 The Pinks Alliance 21 BUNDNIS21 1 1 European Party LOVE LIEBE 1 Liberal Conservative Reformers LKR 3 7 10 1 1 8 7 3 4 6 2Party for Progress PdF Lobbyists for Children LfK South Schleswig Voters Association SSW g 5 Team Todenhofer The Justice Party Team Todenhofer 2 1 Independents for Citizen oriented Democracy UNABHANGIGE 2 3 1 1 2 2 Volt Germany Volt 13 12 2 1 1 3 5 15 10 2 From now Democracy by Referendum Volksabstimmung 2 Bergpartei die UberPartei B 1 The Others sonstige 1 Family Party of Germany FAMILIE 1 Grey Panthers Graue Panther 1 1 2 2 1Climate List Baden Wurttemberg KlimalisteBW 7 Thuringian Homeland Party THP 1Independents and voter groups 15 26 9 18 2 15 2 21 31 22 1 22 7 2 3Party BW BY BE BB HB HH HE MV NI NW RP SL SN ST SH THTotal constituencies 38 46 12 10 2 6 22 6 30 64 15 4 16 9 11 8Registration of candidates Edit In July 2021 the respective state electoral committees rejected the lists of the AfD in Bremen and the Greens in Saarland The AfD list was rejected for formal reasons while the Green list in Saarland was declared invalid due to a controversial nomination process in which one third of the state delegates were excluded from the nomination convention Both state parties filed motions against the rulings The federal electoral committee dismissed the motion of the Saarland Greens while the AfD list in Bremen was permitted to run in the elections The Green Party will thus not be eligible for the proportional vote in Saarland for the first time in the party s history 58 Campaign EditMajor issues Edit The federal election was impacted by incumbent chancellor Angela Merkel s decision not to run again 59 and candidates to present themselves as the natural successor to Merkel 60 The 2021 European floods put the climate issue back on the agenda in July The SPD called for everything to be done to stop global warming while the CDU CSU wanted to speed up climate protection measures 61 By the end of July 56 per cent of Germans believed that the floods made it even more important than before to combat climate change and 73 per cent believed the government was not doing enough in this area only the AfD s supporters were overwhelmingly of the opposite opinion 62 Following those events six people under the age of 30 began a hunger strike in front of the Reichstag building at the end of August They demanded a sincere dialogue with the leaders of the main political parties before the elections and the establishment of a citizens convention to decide on ambitious measures for the climate 63 During the deadly German floods while visiting Erftstadt on 18 July the CDU CSU lead candidate Armin Laschet was caught laughing on camera and making jokes while President Frank Walter Steinmeier was speaking Laschet was heavily criticized despite his apology saying It was stupid and shouldn t have happened and I regret it Both the CDU CSU and Laschet s ratings suffered heavily in opinion polls and the SPD took the lead 64 65 Red red green coalition Edit During the campaign Scholz rejected tax cuts for the rich as immoral 66 pledged to increase taxes on the wealthy spend on cleaner technology and expand social programs 67 and a minimum wage increase to 12 euros 68 In general there was broad agreement among left leaning parties on issues such as climate change education finance health and higher taxes for the rich and The Left being more pro European than similar left wing parties like La France Insoumise 69 while issues of disagreement were foreign policy and security 70 Writing for The Guardian Philip Oltermann commented Paradoxically some Social Democrats see such commonalities as an obstacle rather than a boon for an effective power sharing deal since all three parties already call for a wealth tax for example it s unclear what policy Die Linke could sell its supporters as a win even if were to get its hands on the coveted labour ministry 69 Both the SPD and the Greens did not speak much on the subject but did not rule it out in public although in private they were more sceptics One SPD delegate was quoted as saying To prepare the ground for a robust and functioning coalition you need to make sure that no one walks out of talks looking like a loser That s difficult enough with two but it becomes even more difficult when you have three partners 69 Oltermann posited that The Left could see entering federal government as a final chance to reverse the party s decline even if it means moving some of its red lines of old 69 In its election manifesto The Left called for abolishing NATO in favour of a collective security system with Russia s involvement to which Scholz said that this is an example of minimum criteria to govern which is not negotiable 71 The Left s lead candidates stated that those demands are a tribute to the party s historic anti imperialist roots rather than reflecting ambitions to govern at the federal level and a discussion on the future of NATO is also being led by centrists such as France s Emmanuel Macron 69 The party struck the anti NATO demand from its immediate policy measures and Janine Wissler responded that foreign policy was more than NATO 72 Gregor Gysi a member of the left wing of the party stated that such demands are more of a vision are not to be implemented as soon as possible and should not be seen as inflexible preconditions for a left wing coalition 73 As significant issues remain attempts among willing delegates from both parties have been made over the years on how such issues could be solved in a coalition the solution of an internal vote preceding foreign policies votes such as foreign deployments on a case by case analysis was deemed to be unworkable by many in the SPD The Greens see foreign policy differences with The Left as big as financial and debt disagreements with the FDP 69 The Left joining the federal government would have broken a taboo due to being a democratic successor of East Germany s ruling party and for its pacifist and anti militarist stance 69 and could be seen as following examples in Spain and Sweden 74 A traffic light coalition SPD FDP Greens was seen as the more likely scenario but a R2G coalition which would be favoured by the left wing leadership 73 and rank and file party members 72 was not excluded if coalition talks with FDP fail due minimum wage increase or the wealth tax 69 Debates Edit Armin Laschet vs Annalena Baerbock vs Olaf ScholzFor the first time since 2002 the four major television broadcasters ARD ZDF RTL and ProSieben Sat 1 did not hold a joint television debate Separate debates were previously prevented by incumbent chancellor Merkel who did not run for reelection For the first time in history three way major debates were held as the Greens were invited after overtaking the SPD in opinion polls 75 2021 German federal election debatesDate Broadcasters P Present S Surrogate I Invited NI Not invited CDU SPD Grune AfD FDP Linke CSU17 May 2021 76 RBB Fernsehen NI PScholz PBaerbock NI NI NI NI20 May 2021 77 WDR tagesschau24 PLaschet PScholz PBaerbock NI NI NI NI26 June 2021 78 tagesschau24 PLaschet PScholz PBaerbock NI NI NI NI29 August 2021 79 RTL n tv PLaschet PScholz PBaerbock NI NI NI NI30 August 2021 80 ZDF SSpahn SGiffey SGoring Eckardt PWeidel PLindner PBartsch PDobrindt12 September 2021 75 Das Erste ZDF PLaschet PScholz PBaerbock NI NI NI NI13 September 2021 81 ZDF NI NI NI PWeidel SKubicki PWissler SBlume13 September 82 Das Erste NI NI NI PWeidel PLindner PWissler PDobrindt19 September 2021 83 ProSieben Sat 1 Kabel eins PLaschet PScholz PBaerbock NI NI NI NI23 September 2021 75 Das Erste ZDF PLaschet PScholz PBaerbock PWeidel PLindner PWissler PSoderMembers of Parliament standing down EditAfD Edit Axel Gehrke 84 Wilhelm von Gottberg 85 Heiko Hessenkemper 86 Lothar Maier 87 Roman Reusch 85 Heiko Wildberg 88 CDU CSU Edit Norbert Barthle 89 Manfred Behrens 90 Sybille Benning 91 Peter Bleser 92 Norbert Brackmann 93 Axel Fischer 94 Maria Flachsbarth 95 Hans Joachim Fuchtel 96 Alois Gerig 97 Eberhard Gienger 98 Astrid Groteluschen 99 Mark Hauptmann 100 Matthias Heider 101 Heribert Hirte 102 Karl Holmeier 103 Alois Karl 104 Volker Kauder former CDU CSU parliamentary leader 105 Andreas Lammel 106 Karl A Lamers 107 Katharina Landgraf 108 Nikolas Lobel 109 Thomas de Maiziere former Minister of the Interior 110 Hans Georg von der Marwitz 111 Angela Merkel incumbent Chancellor 112 Hans Michelbach 113 Elisabeth Motschmann 114 Gerd Muller 115 incumbent Minister of Economic Cooperation and Development Michaela Noll 116 Georg Nusslein 117 Martin Patzelt 118 Joachim Pfeiffer 119 Eckhardt Rehberg 120 Lothar Riebsamen 121 Anita Schafer 122 Klaus Peter Schulze 123 Uwe Schummer 124 Patrick Sensburg 125 Frank Steffel 126 Karin Strenz 127 Peter Tauber 128 Arnold Vaatz 106 Kees de Vries 90 Peter Weiss 129 Marian Wendt 130 Tobias Zech 131 SPD Edit Bela Bach 132 Lothar Binding 133 Ingrid Arndt Brauer 134 Fritz Felgentreu 135 Ulrich Freese 136 Dagmar Freitag 137 Barbara Hendricks 138 former minister of Federal Ministry of the Environment Nature Conservation and Nuclear Safety Marcus Held 139 Gustav Herzog 140 Gabriele Hiller Ohm Thomas Jurk 141 Arno Klare 142 Daniela Kolbe 143 Ralf Kapschack 144 Christine Lambrecht incumbent Minister for Justice and Consumer Protection 145 Christian Lange 146 Kirsten Luhmann 147 Caren Marks 148 Christoph Matschie 149 Hilde Mattheis 150 Markus Paschke 151 Florian Pronold 152 Sascha Raabe 153 Ernst Dieter Rossmann 154 Ulla Schmidt 155 former minister of Federal Ministry of Health Ursula Schulte 156 Martin Schulz SPD candidate for Chancellor in the 2017 federal election 157 Swen Schulz 158 Rainer Spiering 159 Sonja Steffen 120 Kerstin Tack 160 Gabi Weber 161 Dagmar Ziegler incumbent Vice President of the Bundestag 162 FDP Edit Grigorios Aggelidis 163 Britta Dassler 164 Hartmut Ebbing 165 Ulla Ihnen 166 Marcel Klinge 167 Alexander Kulitz 168 Roman Muller Bohm 169 Martin Neumann 170 Wieland Schinnenburg 171 Frank Sitta 172 Hermann Otto Solms Father of the House 173 Katja Suding 174 Greens Edit Anja Hajduk 175 Sylvia Kotting Uhl 176 Monika Lazar 177 Friedrich Ostendorff 178 Frithjof Schmidt 179 The Left Edit Heidrun Bluhm 120 Sylvia Gabelmann 180 Fabio De Masi 181 Ulla Jelpke 182 Sabine Leidig 183 Stefan Liebich 184 Michael Leutert 185 Niema Movassat 186 Kirsten Tackmann 187 Andreas Wagner 188 Hubertus Zdebel 189 Independents Edit Frauke Petry former leader of AfD 190 Opinion polls EditMain article Opinion polling for the 2021 German federal election Local regression of polls conducted Poll trackers Edit Trackers of voting intentions and other election related polling Europe Elects The Economist The Guardian includes breakdown of hypothetical coalition governments New Statesman includes polling of German voters preferred chancellor and the issues they prioritise as well as a breakdown of hypothetical coalition governments PoliticoResults EditMain article Results of the 2021 German federal election Although the vote share of the South Schleswig Voters Association 0 12 was well below the 5 electoral threshold due to its status of being representative of a recognised minority group Danes and Frisians an exception in federal law allowed the party to win one party list seat PartyParty listConstituencyTotalseats Votes SeatsVotes SeatsSocial Democratic Party11 955 43425 748512 234 69026 39121206 53Christian Democratic Union8 775 47118 905410 451 52422 5498152 48Alliance 90 The Greens6 852 20614 751026 469 08113 9516118 51Free Democratic Party5 319 95211 46924 042 9518 72092 12Alternative for Germany4 803 90210 34674 695 61110 131683 11Christian Social Union2 402 8275 1702 788 0486 014545 1The Left2 270 9064 89362 307 5364 98339 30Free Voters1 127 7842 4301 334 7392 88000Human Environment Animal Protection675 3531 450163 2010 35000Grassroots Democratic Party630 1531 360735 4511 5900NewDie PARTEI461 5700 990543 1451 17000Team Todenhofer214 5350 4605 7000 0100NewPirate Party Germany169 9230 37060 8390 13000Volt Germany165 4740 36078 3390 1700NewEcological Democratic Party112 3140 240152 7920 33000National Democratic Party64 5740 1401 0900 00000South Schleswig Voters Association55 5780 12135 0270 0801 1Partei fur Gesundheitsforschung49 3490 1102 8420 01000Party of Humanists47 7110 10012 7300 03000Alliance C Christians for Germany39 8680 0906 2220 01000Bavaria Party32 7900 07036 7480 08000V Partei331 8840 07010 6440 02000Independents for Citizen oriented Democracy22 7360 05013 4210 03000The Greys19 4430 0402 3680 01000Die Urbane Eine HipHop Partei17 8110 0401 9120 00000Marxist Leninist Party17 7990 04022 5340 05000German Communist Party14 9250 0305 4460 01000Alliance for Human Rights Animal and Nature Protection13 6720 0307 3710 02000European Party Love12 9670 0308730 0000NewLiberal Conservative Reformers11 1590 02010 7670 0200NewLobbyists for Children9 1890 0200NewThird Way7 8320 0205150 0000NewGarden Party7 6110 0202 0950 00000Citizens Movement7 4910 0201 5560 0000NewDemocracy in Motion7 1840 0202 6090 01000Human World3 7860 0106560 00000The Pinks Alliance 213 4880 0103770 0000NewParty of Progress3 2280 0100NewSocialist Equality Party1 4170 00000Burgerrechtsbewegung Solidaritat7270 0008110 00000Klimaliste Baden Wurttemberg3 9670 0100NewFamily Party1 8170 00000Democracy by Referendum1 0860 00000Grey Panthers9610 0000NewThuringian Homeland Party5490 0000NewThe Others2560 0000NewBergpartei die UberPartei 2220 00000Independents and voter groups110 8940 24000Total46 442 023100 0043746 362 013100 00299736 27Valid votes46 442 02399 1246 362 01398 95Invalid blank votes412 4850 88492 4951 05Total votes46 854 508100 0046 854 508100 00Registered voters turnout61 181 07276 5861 181 07276 58Source BundeswahlleiterResults by state Edit Party list vote share by state 191 State SPD Union Grune FDP AfD Linke Others Schleswig Holstein 28 0 22 0 18 3 12 5 6 8 3 6 8 7 Mecklenburg Vorpommern 29 1 17 4 7 8 8 2 18 0 11 1 8 4 Hamburg 29 7 15 4 24 9 11 4 5 0 6 7 6 9 Lower Saxony 33 1 24 2 16 1 10 5 7 4 3 3 5 4 Bremen 31 5 17 2 20 9 9 3 6 9 7 7 6 4 Brandenburg 29 5 15 3 9 0 9 3 18 1 8 5 10 3 Saxony Anhalt 25 4 21 0 6 5 9 5 19 6 9 6 8 4 Berlin 23 4 15 9 22 4 9 1 8 4 11 4 9 5 North Rhine Westphalia 29 1 26 0 16 1 11 4 7 3 3 7 6 5 Saxony 19 3 17 2 8 6 11 0 24 6 9 3 9 9 Hesse 27 6 22 8 15 8 12 8 8 8 4 3 7 9 Thuringia 23 4 16 9 6 6 9 0 24 0 11 4 8 7 Rhineland Palatinate 29 4 24 7 12 6 11 7 9 2 3 3 9 2 Bavaria 18 0 31 7 14 1 10 5 9 0 2 8 13 9 Baden Wurttemberg 21 6 24 8 17 2 15 3 9 6 3 3 8 2 Saarland 37 3 23 6 11 5 10 0 7 2 10 5Constituency seats Edit State Totalseats Seats wonSPD CDU CSU Grune AfD LinkeBaden Wurttemberg 38 1 33 4Bavaria 46 45 1Berlin 12 4 3 3 2Brandenburg 10 10Bremen 2 2Hamburg 6 4 2Hesse 22 14 7 1Lower Saxony 30 22 8Mecklenburg Vorpommern 6 6North Rhine Westphalia 64 30 30 4Rhineland Palatinate 15 8 7Saarland 4 4Saxony 16 1 4 10 1Saxony Anhalt 9 4 3 2Schleswig Holstein 11 8 2 1Thuringia 8 3 1 4Total 299 121 98 45 16 16 3List seats Edit State Totalseats Seats wonGrune FDP SPD AfD CDU Linke SSWBaden Wurttemberg 64 14 16 21 10 3Bavaria 71 18 14 23 12 4Berlin 17 4 3 3 3 2 2Brandenburg 15 2 2 5 4 2Bremen 3 1 1 1Hamburg 10 2 2 1 1 3 1Hesse 28 8 7 1 5 5 2Lower Saxony 43 13 8 3 6 10 3Mecklenburg Vorpommern 10 1 1 3 3 2North Rhine Westphalia 91 23 19 19 12 12 6Rhineland Palatinate 21 5 5 4 4 2 1Saarland 5 1 1 2 1Saxony 22 4 5 7 3 3Saxony Anhalt 9 1 2 1 2 1 2Schleswig Holstein 17 5 4 2 4 1 1Thuringia 11 1 2 2 1 2 3Total 437 102 92 85 67 54 36 1MPs who lost their seat Edit Main article List of MPs who lost their seat in the 2021 German federal election 10 closest constituencies Edit Incumbents are denoted in bold and followed by I Constituency State Winner Runner up Vote differenceDresden II Bautzen II Saxony Lars Rohwer Andreas Harlass 35Sudpfalz Rhineland Palatinate Thomas Hitschler Thomas Gebhart I 41Steinburg Dithmarschen Sud Schleswig Holstein Mark Helfrich I Karin Thissen 52Emmendingen Lahr Baden Wurttemberg Peter Weiss Johannes Fechner 90Munich West Centre Bavaria Stephan Pilsinger I Dieter Janecek 137Mansfeld Saxony Anhalt Robert Farle Torsten Schweiger I 198Bonn North Rhine Westphalia Katrin Uhlig Jessica Rosenthal 216Leipzig Land Saxony Edgar Naujok Georg Ludwig von Breitenbuch 282Burgenland Saalekreis Saxony Anhalt Dieter Stier I Martin Reichardt 321Hamburg Eimsbuttel Hamburg Till Steffen Niels Annen I 359Irregularities in Berlin Edit The many postal ballot papers at Berlin Charlottenburg Wilmersdorf In Berlin vote casting and counting was not simple as the election was the same day as not only the Berlin Marathon but the Berlin state election and a local referendum The Federal Returning Officer felt compelled to request a report from the State Returning Officer Petra Michaelis 192 In some polling stations ballot papers were missing or ran out and could not be delivered on the same day due to the Berlin marathon Ballot papers of which there were 115 different variants in Berlin and postal voting documents were also swapped Many votes were cast long after the official end of voting at 6 p m the last after 8 p m when the outcome was already being forecast 193 At least one polling station was closed due to missing documents 194 In at least 16 Berlin polling stations basic election data did not match including impossible voter turnouts of over 100 195 On 29 September 2021 Michaelis announced her resignation and that of her deputy 196 Analysis and aftermath Edit Party affiliation of winning candidates by constituency Results of the party list vote by state List seats by state Sociology of the electorateDemographic SPD Union Grune FDP AfD Linke Free Voters OthersTotal vote 25 7 24 1 14 8 11 5 10 3 4 9 2 4 6 3 SexMen 25 24 14 13 12 5 2 5 Women 27 24 16 10 8 5 2 8 Age18 24 years old 15 10 23 21 7 8 3 13 25 34 years old 17 14 21 15 12 7 3 13 35 44 years old 20 19 18 12 15 5 3 8 45 59 years old 26 23 16 12 12 4 3 4 60 69 years old 32 28 12 9 10 4 2 3 70 or older 35 38 7 8 5 4 1 2 Socio occupational classificationUnemployed 23 14 17 8 17 11 3 7 Blue collar worker 26 20 8 9 21 5 3 8 White collar worker 24 20 17 13 11 5 3 7 Self employed 16 26 16 19 9 5 3 6 Retired 35 34 10 7 7 4 2 3 Source Infratest dimap 197 SPD Edit The SPD had their best result since 2005 at 25 it was also the first time since 2002 that they emerged as the largest party in the Bundestag For the first time since 2002 the SPD swept all single member constituency seats in the states of Brandenburg and Saarland where they defeated cabinet ministers Peter Altmaier and Annegret Kramp Karrenbauer 198 They also won all constituencies in Mecklenburg Vorpommern for the first time including Vorpommern Rugen Vorpommern Greifswald I the seat of outgoing chancellor Angela Merkel 199 It is also the first time they won any single member constituency seats in Saxony Anhalt and Thuringia since 2005 200 201 202 The SPD had been written off by many political observers due to longtime internal quarrels 203 204 and poor performances in prior elections even those in early 2021 In the 2019 European Parliament election they dropped to a historic low 15 8 accelerating the decline of already deeply embattled and unpopular leader Andrea Nahles 205 When the unpopular and little known SPD leaders 206 Norbert Walter Borjans and Saskia Esken nominated moderate Olaf Scholz whom they had unexpectedly defeated in the 2019 leadership election as Chancellor candidate in August 2020 207 they were widely mocked 208 The SPD sat at a distant third place in the polls and stayed there until their sudden surge late in the campaign However even at their historic poll lows around 14 Olaf Scholz had a significantly higher personal approval rating than both his party and the other Chancellor candidates Laschet and Baerbock 209 After the extreme personal unpopularity resulting from gaffes and scandal meant that first Baerbock and then Laschet floundered the SPD surprisingly took the lead for the first time since early 2017 in the final stretches of the election campaign This surprising surge also meant that some paper candidates a lot of them young were unexpectedly elected to the Bundestag for example Jan Plobner Jakob Blankenburg or Fabian Funke That being said the surge and eventual outcome of the election was mainly decided by older voters who switched from the CDU CSU to the SPD 210 which some attributed to Scholz being very similar in his calm and moderate leadership style to incumbent Angela Merkel 211 CDU CSU Edit The CDU CSU had their worst result ever by far eclipsing the previous worst of 31 in 1949 Many prominent politicians were defeated in their single member constituency seats including ministers Altmaier Helge Braun Kramp Karrenbauer and Julia Klockner as well as Hans Georg Maassen and Philipp Amthor though all of them except Maassen were still elected to the Bundestag via their respective state party lists 212 h There was speculation that chancellor candidate Armin Laschet would lose election to the Bundestag 213 he was placed first on the North Rhine Westphalia party list and if the CDU gained overhang seats that list would not be used Due to the CDU s bad performance in terms of single member constituency seats Laschet was elected to the Bundestag 214 The first time since 2005 that they did not win all single member constituency seats in Bavaria the CSU also had their worst result in history 215 Reasons given for the catastrophic defeat were corruption scandals of several CDU CSU politicians in spring 2021 216 some minor allegations even being brought against Laschet himself 217 In addition Laschet was suffering from extreme personal unpopularity 218 even in his own state 219 Laschet did not have the incumbency advantage that helped moderately popular Merkel to win re election three times but still had to run on Merkel s legacy in voters minds This meant that the otherwise popular CDU CSU platform of increasing digitization reducing bureaucracy and moderate climate action were not taken seriously as his party had not addressed them in sixteen years of government in the minds of many voters 220 In one infamous campaign moment Laschet spoke of a Wind of Change in his closing statement in the first three way debate 221 which was widely ridiculed 222 The contentious decision to have him run as CDU CSU candidate instead of the much more popular CSU leader Markus Soder by the CDU establishment also played into this 223 During the belligerent internal selection process in spring polls showed Soder faring a lot better than Laschet in the election often higher than the 2017 result and Soder was the preferred candidate of the base and the public at large 224 Even fairly late into the election campaign 70 of CDU CSU supporters wanted to replace Laschet with Soder 225 Soder publicly supported and defended Laschet even on election night 226 but was accused of backstabbing Laschet s candidacy 227 in order to become chancellor candidate in 2025 Laschet took responsibility for the result but initially refused to resign in hopes of becoming Chancellor through a Jamaica coalition The ensuing talks were plagued by leaks damaging Laschet 228 and after Soder prematurely declared the talks to be over 229 both Greens and FDP decided to enter coalition talks with the SPD instead 230 After intense pressure from his party and the public Laschet announced on 8 October 2021 that he would step down but would moderate the next CDU leadership election 231 That leadership contest was the first to be decided by party members who overwhelmingly chose conservative outsider Friedrich Merz in December 2021 after he failed in the previous two leadership elections to Annegret Kramp Karrenbauer in 2018 and Laschet in January 2021 This was seen as a rebuttal to the party establishment that backed Kramp Karrenbauer and Laschet both seen as being more moderate aligned in both policy positions and leadership style to Angela Merkel Greens Edit The Greens got their best result in history nearly doubling from 2017 This is also the first federal election in which they won single member constituency seats outside of Berlin Friedrichshain Kreuzberg Prenzlauer Berg East however expectations for them were a lot higher with them polling at over 20 in the summer and peaking at around 25 having briefly overtaken the CDU in April and May 232 233 Their slump in the polls was largely attributed to a number of gaffes from and the personal unpopularity of Annalena Baerbock 234 though polls show that a lot of Green voters migrated to the SPD in the final weeks of the campaign to ensure the CDU would not form government 235 Though she won in the party list Baerbock lost in Potsdam Potsdam Mittelmark II Teltow Flaming II to SPD s Olaf Scholz by a large margin 236 In addition though the Greens won 16 single member constituency seats all of them except Flensburg Schleswig the constituency of future Vice Chancellor Robert Habeck were entirely urban constituencies The Greens were also disqualified from running on the Saarland state list due to irregularities in the selection of list candidates 237 The Greens had however won only one seat in the Saarland in the previous two federal elections FDP Edit The FDP had their second best showing since German reunification gaining a few seats to maintain its fourth place position 238 This was enough to make it a kingmaker alongside the Greens in coalition talks 239 Like the Greens they did well with young voters among first time voters they received the highest vote share of 23 240 In addition while they only marginally improved their result in the West German states their more significant increase in support in former East Germany amounted to their best performance there in the party s history AfD Edit The AfD lost seats and went from the third largest to the fifth largest party in the Bundestag however they performed strongly in former East Germany where they won 16 single member constituency seats in Saxony Saxony Anhalt and Thuringia 241 242 While the AfD lost vote share in Saxony the stronger losses of the CDU still allowed them to place ahead of the CDU becoming the most voted party in Saxony They also won the most party list votes in Thuringia though only by 0 6 Reasons given for their drop in support include far less media attention largely due to the open Chancellor s race and large swaths of Anti lockdown and Anti vaccination voters which the AfD campaigned hard on voting for dieBasis and Free Voters Leader of the AfD in the Bundestag Alice Weidel was widely ridiculed for claiming on election night that they surpassed their 2017 result if one added the results for dieBasis and Free Voters 243 244 The Left Edit The Left had their worst showing since 2002 when it was the Party of Democratic Socialism slumping from 69 seats in 2017 to just 39 While they fell just short of the election threshold they won at least three single member constituency seats two in their stronghold in the former East Berlin down from four and one in Saxony entitling them to proportional representation in the Bundestag according to their second votes 245 Under a longstanding electoral law intended to benefit parties with regional appeal as is the case with the Left in the old East Germany any party that wins at least three constituency seats is entitled to its share of proportionally elected seats regardless of vote share 246 Apart from this symbolic defeat their preferred government a left wing red red green coalition 247 does not have a majority in the Bundestag 248 and the German financial market rallied as a result 249 250 Vice President of the Bundestag Petra Pau lost her single member constituency of Berlin Marzahn Hellersdorf by a large margin 251 The seat had been held by The Left and its predecessor parties since the 1990 federal election Reasons given for the massive slump were public quarrels in the party 252 253 This included feuds surrounding the position on Afghanistan 254 the former leader Oskar Lafontaine who advised voting against his party in the Saarland due to alleged fraud 255 and popular figure Sahra Wagenknecht who some in the party wanted to expel for her book Die Selbstgerechten in which she harshly criticizes among other things Wokeness within her party 256 These public feuds intensified after the election 257 for example the convicted former head of government of East Germany Hans Modrow who chairs The Left s council of elders denounced the party 258 Ethnic minorities Edit In terms of representation of ethnic minorities one source suggested that the Bundestag would have 24 new MPs with Balkan ancestry Its list included however largely people of Turkish ancestry who mostly have roots in Anatolia 259 The South Schleswig Voters Association SSW a regionalist party only contesting Schleswig Holstein representing the Danish and Frisian minorities in Southern Schleswig won their first seat becoming the first regionalist party to win seats since 1953 260 Recognized minority parties are exempt from the threshold of 5 which is how the SSW won a seat with 0 1 of the vote nationwide i The SSW last contested in 1961 and last won a seat in 1949 261 They named a felt discrimination of Northern Germany as reason for them contesting the election 262 Stefan Seidler was seated as their Member of the German Bundestag 263 Seidler was offered to sit in the SPD parliamentary group as a guest by their leader Rolf Mutzenich but declined 264 Minor parties Edit Minor parties did exceptionally well in the 2021 election The left wing satire party Die PARTEI had their best result ever as did the Animal Protection Party and the regionalist Free Voters which doubled their result and received 7 5 in Bavaria where they take part in the state government A few new minor parties emerged in the 2021 election the most notable being the Anti lockdown and Anti vaccination dieBasis party which received between 1 and 1 9 Team Todenhofer founded in 2020 by notorious former CDU Member of the German Bundestag Jurgen Todenhofer also first contested the 2021 election running on Anti militarism and receiving support from pro Palestinian groups but only garnered 0 5 of the vote The 2021 election also accelerated the decline of the far right National Democratic Party which only got 0 1 of the vote The NPD was at a time the most successful minor fringe party getting 1 6 in 2005 and entering various state parliaments in former East Germany Government formation EditMain articles List of members of the 20th Bundestag and Scholz cabinet A three party governing coalition with the FDP and the Greens joining either the SPD or CDU CSU was discussed as a likely outcome 265 266 While the grand coalition of the CDU CSU and SPD could have been renewed numerous representatives of both the CDU CSU and the SPD ruled out this option before the federal election 267 during the campaign 268 269 and after 270 271 On election night SPD leader Scholz reiterated his goal to form a government citing the fact that his party emerged as the largest in parliament 272 He expressed his intention to become chancellor and his preference for a traffic light coalition with the FDP and the Greens 273 Leading figures in the CDU CSU such as Michael Kretschmer stated that since the CDU CSU was knocked down to second place it should not form the government 274 The FDP and the Greens having won 210 seats between them announced that they would talk separately before deciding on whom to support as a senior coalition partner 275 The Greens and the FDP held discussions for two days after the election 276 On 7 October the two parties met with the SPD for the first round of exploratory talks 277 with a second round on 11 October 278 On 15 October the SPD agreed to more ambitious climate targets as pledged by the Greens 279 On 17 October the Greens voted to enter formal coalition talks with the SPD and FDP 280 The next day the FDP voted to do the same 281 The 20th Bundestag was officially sworn in on 26 October 282 On 16 November the general secretaries of the three traffic light coalition parties SPD FDP Greens announced that an agreement document was almost complete with Scholz to become Chancellor and that the details would be issued some time in the next week 283 On 23 November an agreement for a traffic light coalition was finalised 284 The three parties announced a number of policies including plans to phase out coal energy by 2030 eight years ahead of the previous target as well as lower the federal voting age to 16 years raise the minimum wage to 12 per hour and lower barriers to acquiring German citizenship Annalena Baerbock will become foreign minister while Robert Habeck will head a new super ministry with responsibility for climate energy and economy Christian Lindner will become finance minister 285 286 The SPD convention voted 98 8 in favour of approving the agreement on 4 December 287 followed by the FDP with 92 4 on 5 December 288 The results of the Greens membership ballot were announced on 6 December with 86 voting to approve the coalition 289 Scholz was elected as Chancellor by the Bundestag on 8 December 290 j with 395 votes of 707 cast with 303 votes against 294 Notes Edit a b Annalena Baerbock and Robert Habeck were co lead candidates while Baerbock was candidate for Chancellor The Greens were disqualified from running on the Saarland state list due to irregularities in the selection of list candidates 1 Parties winning one or two single member constituencies retain those single member constituency seats but do not win any proportional seats This has happened in the 2002 German federal election where the PDS won two single member constituencies in the state of Berlin while failing the electoral threshold with 4 0 of second votes received Subsequently the party was represented with two seats in the 15th Bundestag In the 1949 West German federal election the threshold and waiver applied on a statewide level In the 1953 West German federal election only one single member constituency was required for the waiver benefiting the Centre Party and the German Party In Germany many holidays are determined on state level and therefore do not apply for all Germans Federal holidays are New Year s Day Good Friday Easter Monday Labour Day Ascension Day Whit Monday German Unity Day First Christmas Day and Second Christmas Day Boxing Day CSU received 38 8 in Bavaria It only fields candidates in Bavaria where the CDU does not field candidates The South Schleswig Voters Association is a recognised minority party representing the Danish and Frisian minorities of Southern Schleswig and is exempt from the 5 electoral threshold in Germany 35 Kramp Karrenbauer and Altmaier renounced their mandate on 8 October meaning they will not take their seat at the start of the new Bundestag Seat are apportioned on a state level the SSW won 3 2 of the vote in Schleswig Holstein During the government formation talks Angela Merkel headed a caretaker government after the Fourth Merkel cabinet was formally dismissed by the President of Germany on 26 October 2021 291 had the new government not taken office by 17 December Merkel would have overtaken 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from the original on 27 September 2021 Retrieved 27 September 2021 Frigelj Kristian 9 March 2021 Laschet Regierung weichte Korruptionsschutz auf trotz Warnung Retrieved 4 February 2022 a href Template Cite news html title Template Cite news cite news a CS1 maint url status link Thurau Jens 18 May 2021 Laschet Regierung weichte Korruptionsschutz auf trotz Warnung in German Retrieved 4 February 2022 a href Template Cite news html title Template Cite news cite news a CS1 maint url status link Laschet auf dem letzten Platz am liebsten hatten die Deutschen Soder als Kanzler in German 5 August 2021 Retrieved 4 February 2022 a href Template Cite news html title Template Cite news cite news a CS1 maint url status link Soder bei Menschen in NRW doppelt so beliebt wie Laschet in German 11 April 2021 Retrieved 4 February 2022 a href Template Cite news html title Template Cite news cite news a CS1 maint url status link Cerstin Gammelin 21 June 2021 Ein Weiter so das es nicht geben darf Yahoo Nachrichten in German Retrieved 8 February 2022 a href Template Cite news html title Template Cite news cite news a CS1 maint url status link Bundestagswahl 2021 LIVE Das Triell Baerbock Laschet Scholz in German 29 August 2021 Retrieved 8 February 2022 a href Template Cite AV media html title Template Cite AV media cite AV media a CS1 maint url status link Piehler Moritz 30 August 2021 Spott nach dem TV Triell Armin Laschet und der Wind der Veranderung Yahoo Nachrichten in German Retrieved 8 February 2022 a href Template Cite news html title Template Cite news cite news a CS1 maint url status link Wie das Laschet Drama die Risse in der CDU offenlegt in German 19 April 2021 Retrieved 4 February 2022 a href Template Cite news html title Template Cite news cite news a CS1 maint url status link Soder vs Laschet Umfragen zeigen eindeutiges Bild Union legt trotz K Zoff uberraschend zu in German 20 April 2021 Retrieved 9 March 2022 a href Template Cite news html title Template Cite news cite news a CS1 maint url status link 70 Prozent der Unionsanhanger wollen Laschet durch Soder ersetzen in German 25 August 2021 Retrieved 8 February 2022 a href Template Cite news html title Template Cite news cite news a CS1 maint url status link Berliner Runde zur Bundestagswahl 2021 in German 26 September 2021 Retrieved 8 February 2022 a href Template Cite AV media html title Template Cite AV media cite AV media a CS1 maint url status link Schnellboot an Schlafwagen in German 29 July 2021 Retrieved 8 February 2022 a href Template Cite news html title Template Cite news cite news a CS1 maint url status link Ismar Georg 6 October 2021 Neuer Sondierungs Leak Grune sauer auf die Union in German Retrieved 2 December 2021 a href Template Cite news html title Template Cite news cite news a CS1 maint url status link De facto Absage an Jamaika Soder sieht klare Vorentscheidung fur Ampel Koalition in German 6 October 2021 Retrieved 8 February 2022 a href Template Cite news html title Template Cite news cite news a CS1 maint url status link Forster Josef 7 October 2021 Nach Absage an Jamaika Koalition Wie schnell kommt die Ampel in German Retrieved 2 December 2021 a href Template Cite news html title Template Cite news cite news a CS1 maint url status link Stempfle Michael 7 October 2021 Ruckzug auf Raten in German Retrieved 2 December 2021 a href Template Cite news html title Template Cite news cite news a CS1 maint url status link Ellyatt Holly 11 August 2021 The Greens were once favorites ahead of Germany s rollercoaster election but not anymore CNBC News Archived from the original on 27 September 2021 Retrieved 27 September 2021 Tretbar Christian 26 September 2021 Schwarz und Grun scheitern an ihren Erwartungen Der Tagesspiegel Online in German ISSN 1865 2263 Archived from the original on 26 September 2021 Retrieved 27 September 2021 Umfrage Mehrheit halt Entscheidung der Grunen fur Baerbock und gegen Habeck fur falsch in German RND Archived from the original on 27 September 2021 Retrieved 27 September 2021 Diekmann Florian Pauly Marcel 27 September 2021 Bundestagswahl 2021 Ergebnis der Wahlerwanderung im Detail Der Spiegel in German ISSN 2195 1349 a cla, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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