December 1946 Bavarian state election

Last updated
1946 Bavarian state election
Flag of Bavaria (striped).svg
  1946 1 December 1946 1950  

All 180 seats in the Landtag of Bavaria
91 seats needed for a majority
Turnout3,048,337 (75.7%)
Increase2.svg 3.6%
 First partySecond partyThird party
  Bundesarchiv B 145 Bild-F014934-0005, Alois Hundhammer.jpg Stock.jpg Silver - replace this image male cropped.png
Leader Alois Hundhammer Jean Stock Alfred Loritz
Party CSU SPD WAV
Seats won1045413
Seat changeDecrease2.svg 5Increase2.svg 3Increase2.svg 5
Popular vote1,593,908871,760225,404
Percentage52.3%28.6%7.4%
SwingDecrease2.svg 6%Decrease2.svg 0.2%Increase2.svg 2.3%

 Fourth partyFifth party
  Silver - replace this image male cropped.png Bundesarchiv B 145 Bild-F018867-0026, Bonn, Minister aus Sudamerika im Bundestag (Ausschnitt Dehler).jpg
Leader Hermann Schirmer Thomas Dehler
Party KPD FDP
Seats won09
Seat changeDecrease2.svg 9Increase2.svg 6
Popular vote185,023172,242
Percentage6.1%5.7%
SwingIncrease2.svg 0.8%Increase2.svg 3.2%

Minister-President before election

Wilhelm Hoegner
SPD

Elected Minister-President

Hans Ehard
CSU

The December 1946 Bavarian state election was held on 1 December 1946 to elect the members of the First Bavarian Landtag. The election came after the dissolution of the Bavarian Constituent Assembly after the passing of the Constitution, which stipulated that a democratically elected Landtag would elect the Minister-President. It saw Bavaria's first democratically chosen Minister-President since Heinrich Held.

Contents

Background

Bavaria was completely occupied by American troops at the end of April 1945. General George S. Patton appointed Christian democrat Fritz Schäffer as interim Minister-President on 28 May 1945, before being dismissed by General Dwight D. Eisenhower on 28 September 1945 due to Schäffer's past anti-Semitic positions, and hiring of ex-Nazis within his administration. [1]

The ministry was then handed over to social democrat Wilhelm Hoegner, who oversaw the creation of a new Bavarian constitution in the spring and summer of 1946. To aid him, the Advisory State Committee was formed, with its members being appointed by the political parties or the state. The body was eventually dissolved, with direct elections being called for a Constituent State Assembly to oversee the passage of the Constitution. After the Constitution had been ratified by the State Assembly, the body was dissolved and elections were called for the first official Landtag since the Weimar Republic. On the same day of the Landtag elections, Bavaria held a plebiscite whether to affirm the newly written Constitution. [2]

Results

The Wilhelm Hoegner regime had been installed by the American military forces in Germany and did not reflect the popular opinion of Bavarians. The Constitution stated that the Minister-President was to be elected by the Landtag, thus when the CSU gained a majority of the seats, the SPD entered a coalition with the CSU and WAV, with a CSU Minister-President, Hans Ehard. In September 1947, the SPD withdrew its ministers and the CSU abandoned its partnership with WAV, forming a sole majority government. [3] This was also the first election in post-war Bavaria that introduced the ten-percent rule, in which a seat would only be allotted to a candidate if they received at least ten percent of the vote in any given constituency. The KPD, while gaining a net positive in overall votes, failed to meet this requirement in any constituency and lost all of their seats. [4]

Parties

The table below lists parties represented in the Constituent State Assembly of Bavaria.

NameIdeologyLeader(s)June 1946 result
Votes (%)Seats
CSU Christian Social Union in Bavaria
Christlich-Soziale Union in Bayern
Christian democracy Alois Hundhammer 58.3
109 / 180
SPD Social Democratic Party of Germany
Sozialdemokratische Partei Deutschlands
Social democracy Jean Stock 28.8
51 / 180
KPD Communist Party of Germany
Kommunistische Partei Deutschlands
Marxism–Leninism Hermann Schirmer 5.3
9 / 180
WAV Economic Reconstruction Union
Wirtschaftliche Aufbau-Vereinigung
Right-wing populism Alfred Loritz 5.1
8 / 180
FDP Free Democratic Party
Freie Demokratische Partei
Liberalism Thomas Dehler 2.5
3 / 180
Summary of the 1 December 1946 election results of the Landtag of Bavaria
PartyVotes %+/-Seats+/-Seats %
Christian Social Union (CSU)1,593,90852.3Decrease2.svg 6%104Decrease2.svg 556.1
Social Democratic Party (SPD)871,76028.6Decrease2.svg 0.2%54Increase2.svg 330
Economic Reconstruction Union (WAV)225,4045.1Increase2.svg 2.3%13Increase2.svg 57.2
Communist Party (KPD)185,0236.1Increase2.svg 0.8%0Decrease2.svg 90
Free Democratic Party (FDP)172,2425.7Increase2.svg 3.2%9Increase2.svg 65
Total3,048,337100.0180±0
Voter turnout75.7Increase2.svg 3.6
Source: Statistik Bayern and Historisches Lexikon Bayerns
Popular Vote
CSU
52.3%
SPD
28.6%
WAV
7.4%
KPD
6.1%
FDP
5.7%
Landtag seats
CSU
56.1%
SPD
30%
WAV
7.2%
FDP
5.7%
KPD
0%

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