1949 West German federal election

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1949 West German federal election
Flag of Germany.svg
  1938
(all-German)
14 August 1949 (1949-08-14) 1953  

All 402 seats in the Bundestag [lower-alpha 1]
202 seats needed for a majority
Turnout78.49%
PartyLeader%Seats
CDU/CSU Konrad Adenauer 31.01139 [lower-alpha 2]
SPD Kurt Schumacher 29.22131 [lower-alpha 3]
FDP Franz Blücher 11.9252 [lower-alpha 4]
KPD Max Reimann 5.7415
BP Joseph Baumgartner 4.1617
DP Heinrich Hellwege 3.9617
Centre Helene Wessel 3.0710
WAV Alfred Loritz 2.8712
DRP Hermann Klingspor  [ de ]1.815
SSW Hermann Clausen 0.321
Independents 4.813
This lists parties that won seats. See the complete results below.
1949 German federal election - Results by constituency.svg
Winning by constituencies (right) and seats won by parties in each states (left). The pie chart over West Berlin shows the composition of its legislature.
Government after
First Adenauer cabinet
CDU/CSUFDPDP

Federal elections were held in West Germany on 14 August 1949 to elect the members of the first Bundestag, [1] with a further eight seats elected in West Berlin between 1949 and January 1952 and another eleven between February 1952 and 1953. [1] They were the first free federal elections in West Germany since 1933 and the first after the division of the country.

Contents

Campaign

After World War II, the German Instrument of Surrender and the country's division into four Allied occupation zones, the elections were held in the Federal Republic of Germany, established under occupation statute in the three Western zones with the proclamation of its Basic Law by the Parlamentarischer Rat assembly of the West German states on 23 May 1949. Most West German parties at the time of the 1949 Bundestag election were committed to democracy, but they disagreed on what kind of democracy West Germany should become.

CDU election poster: With Adenauer for peace, freedom and unity in Germany. CDU Wahlkampfplakat - kaspl001.JPG
CDU election poster: With Adenauer for peace, freedom and unity in Germany.

The Christian Democratic (CDU) leader, 73-year-old Konrad Adenauer, former mayor of Cologne and party chairman in the British Zone since March 1946, believed in moderate, non-denominational and Christian democracy, [2] [3] social market economy and integration with the West. In 1948 he had become president of the Parlamentarischer Rat, an office that added to his popularity as protagonist of a "state-to-be". He attacked social democracy and the British, especially dismantling. [4]

SPD election poster: All millionaires vote for CDU-FDP. All other millions of Germans for the SPD Wahlplakat SPD 1949.jpg
SPD election poster: All millionaires vote for CDU-FDP. All other millions of Germans for the SPD

The Social Democratic (SPD) leader, Kurt Schumacher, wanted a united, democratic and socialist Germany. Schumacher had heavily agitated against the forced merger of the Communist Party (KPD) and SPD (both in the Soviet occupation zone) into the Socialist Unity Party of Germany and he had also turned the party's course away from the working class advocacy group of the Weimar Republic towards a left-wing big tent party with distinct patriotic features. He constantly accused Adenauer of betraying national interests, [3] culminating in his heckling at the Bundestag session of 25 September 1949: "The Chancellor of the Allies!". Schumacher criticised the Catholic Church, calling it the fifth occupying power and criticised denominational education. [4]

Results

In the end and to the great disappointment of the Social Democrats, the CDU/CSU outnumbered them by 31.0% to 29.2% of the votes cast. Enough participating West Germans favoured Adenauer's and his coalition partners' – the liberal Free Democrats' (FDP) and the conservative German Party's (DP) – policies and promises over Schumacher's and the other left-wingers' policies to give the centre-right parties a slight majority of deputies.

To enter the Bundestag, a party had to surmount a threshold of 5% at least in one of the states or to win at least one electoral district; ten parties succeeded. A number of non-voting members (elected in 1949:2 CDU, 5 SPD, 1 FDP; joined in February 1952 by: 3 CDU, 4 SPD, 4 FDP) indirectly elected by the West Berlin legislature (Stadtverordnetenversammlung) are included below in parentheses. The French Saar Protectorate did not participate in this election.

Bundestag composition 1949.svg
PartyVotes%Seats
FPTPPRTotal [lower-alpha 5]
Social Democratic Party 6,934,97529.229635131
Christian Democratic Union 5,978,63625.199124115
Free Democratic Party 2,829,92011.92124052
Christian Social Union 1,380,4485.8224024
Communist Party of Germany 1,361,7065.7401515
Bavaria Party 986,4784.1611617
German Party 939,9343.9651217
Centre Party 727,5053.0701010
Economic Reconstruction Union 681,8882.8701212
Deutsche Rechtspartei 429,0311.81055
Radical Social Freedom Party  [ de ]216,7490.91000
South Schleswig Voters' Association 75,3880.32011
European People's Movement of Germany  [ de ]26,1620.11000
Rheinish-Westfalian People's Party  [ de ]21,9310.09000
Independents1,141,6474.81303
Total23,732,398100.00242160402
Valid votes23,732,39896.88
Invalid/blank votes763,2163.12
Total votes24,495,614100.00
Registered voters/turnout31,207,62078.49
Source: Bundeswahlleiter

Results by state

Constituency seats

StateTotal
seats
Seats won
SPD CDU CSU FDP BP DP Ind.
Baden 77
Bavaria 47122411
Bremen 33
Hamburg 8431
Hesse 221237
Lower Saxony 3424415
North Rhine-Westphalia 6625401
Rhineland-Palatinate 15411
Schleswig-Holstein 14671
Württemberg-Baden 2051122
Württemberg-Hohenzollern 615
Total242969124121153

List seats

StateTotal
seats
Seats won
FDP SPD CDU KPD DP WAV DZP BP DRP SSW
Baden 523
Bavaria 3176126
Bremen 211
Hamburg 51211
Hesse 145162
Lower Saxony 244875
North Rhine-Westphalia 439123910
Rhineland-Palatinate 104321
Schleswig-Holstein 922131
Württemberg-Baden 135512
Württemberg-Hohenzollern 4112
Total16040352415121210651

Aftermath

Schumacher had explicitly refused a grand coalition and led his party into opposition, where it would remain until December 1966, assuming the chair of the SPD parliamentary group as minority leader. On 12 September 1949, he lost the German presidential election, defeated by FDP chairman Theodor Heuss in the second ballot. Schumacher died on 20 August 1952 of the long-term consequences of his concentration camp imprisonment during the Nazi years.

Adenauer had favoured the formation of a smaller centre-right coalition from the beginning. Nominated by the CDU/CSU faction, he was elected the first Chancellor of the Federal Republic of Germany on 15 September 1949 by an absolute majority of 202 of 402 votes. Adenauer had ensured that the votes of the predominantly Social Democrat West Berlin deputies did not count and later stated that he "naturally" had voted for himself. [5] On 20 September, he formed the Cabinet Adenauer I of CDU/CSU, FDP, and DP ministers. Chosen as an interim Chancellor, he held the office until 1963, being re-elected three times (in 1953, in 1957 and in 1961).

Notes

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References

  1. 1 2 Nohlen, Dieter; Stöver, Philip (31 May 2010). Elections in Europe: A data handbook. Nomos. p. 762. ISBN   978-3832956097.
  2. Dennis L. Bark and David R. Gress, A History of West Germany, volume 1: 1945–1963: From Shadow to Substance, London, UK: Basil Blackwell, 1989
  3. 1 2 Erling Bjöl, Grimberg's History of the Nations, volume 23: The Rich West, "The Giant Dwarf: West Germany," Helsinki: WSOY, 1985
  4. 1 2 Charles Williams (2000) Adenauer: The Father of the New Germany, p342
  5. David Reynolds (2015) One World Divisible: A Global History Since 1945, Penguin UK

Further reading