- Politics of Schleswig-Holstein
The Politics of Schleswig-Holstein takes place within a framework of a
federal parliamentary representative democratic republic , where theFederal Government of Germany exercises sovereign rights with certain powers reserved to the states of Germany includingSchleswig-Holstein . The state has a multi-party system where the two main parties are the rightistChristian Democratic Union (CDU) and the leftistSocial Democratic Party of Germany (SPD). TheSouth Schleswig Voter Federation is a small political party present only in this state that represents the Danish andFrisia n minorities.Since the creation of the Federal Republic in 1945, the state's
Minister-President s have been:1 SSV in 1947
2 1954-8: GB/BHE, 1962: GDP
3 1979: GLSH, 1983-92: Grüne, 1996-: B’90/Grüne
4 1947: FDP: 4,97 %, others: KPD: 4,7 %, DKonP: 3,1 %
5 1950: others: DP: 9,6 % (7 seats), DRP: 2,8 %, KPD: 2,2 %
6 1954: others: SHB (DP und SHG) 5,1 % (4 seats), KPD: 2,1 %
7 1958: others: DP: 2,8 %
8 1967: others: NPD: 5,8 % (4 seats)
9 1992: Grüne: 4,97 %, others: DVU: 6,3 % (6 seats)
10 1996: others: DVU: 4,3 %2005 state election
"See also:
Schleswig-Holstein state election, 2005 "Since 2005, the state has been governed by agrand coalition of the CDU and SPD. Prior to theSchleswig-Holstein state election of 2005 , the state had been run by a coalition of the SPD and theAlliance '90/The Greens led byHeide Simonis who had a majority between them of three seats. Following the election both the SPD-Green and the CDU-Free Democratic Party coalitions were short of a majority and theSouth Schleswig Voter Federation (SSW) refused to enter into coalition with either side.Following the election, the SSW announced that they saw more common ground with the SPD than the CDU and so Premier Heide Simonis initially reformed the Red-Green coalition with the assumption of SSW backing. On
March 17 2005 , Simonis failed to win a Landtag vote for the premiership, with the secret ballot tying 34–34. It is not known who the abstainer was, but this prevented the formation of a Red-Green coalition. The SPD then negotiated agrand coalition with the CDU, acceding to the CDU's demand that CDU leaderPeter Harry Carstensen replace Simonis as Minister-president.ee also
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Schleswig-Holstein state election, 2000 References
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