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2011 Berlin state election

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2011 Berlin state election

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All 152 seats in the Abgeordnetenhaus of Berlin
77 seats needed for a majority
Turnout1,487,487 (60.2%)
Increase 2.2%
  First party Second party Third party
 
Leader Klaus Wowereit Frank Henkel Renate Künast
Party SPD CDU Greens
Last election 53 seats, 30.8% 37 seats, 21.3% 23 seats, 13.1%
Seats won 48 39 30
Seat change Decrease 5 Increase 2 Increase 7
Popular vote 413,124 340,992 256,940
Percentage 28.3% 23.4% 17.6%
Swing Decrease 2.5% Increase 2.1% Increase 4.5%

  Fourth party Fifth party Sixth party
 
Leader Harald Wolf Andreas Baum
Party Left Pirates FDP
Last election 23 seats, 13.3% Did not contest 13 seats, 7.6%
Seats won 20 15 0
Seat change Decrease 3 Increase 15 Decrease 13
Popular vote 170,829 129,795 26,916
Percentage 11.6% 8.9% 1.8%
Swing Decrease 4.6% Increase 8.9% Decrease 5.8%

Mayor before election

Klaus Wowereit
SPD

Elected Mayor

Klaus Wowereit
SPD

The 2011 Berlin state election was held on 18 September 2011[1] to elect the members of the Abgeordnetenhaus of Berlin.[2] The incumbent government consisting of the Social Democratic Party (SPD) and The Left lost its majority.[3]

The SPD lost five seats, remaining the largest party, while The Left lost three.[4][5][6] The Christian Democratic Union (CDU) made small gains, while The Greens moved into third place with 30 seats. The Free Democratic Party (FDP) lost three-quarters of its votes and all its seats. The Pirate Party contested its first Berlin state election and won fifteen seats with 8.9% of the vote. This was the first time the party had been elected to a state parliament anywhere in Germany.[7][8]

The SPD initially sought a coalition with The Greens, but talks broke down over the extension of the Bundesautobahn 100. A coalition agreement between the SPD and CDU was finalised in November, with Mayor Klaus Wowereit continuing in office.

Issues and campaign

Christian Democratic Union

The CDU considered safety on the Berlin U-Bahn an issue after a number of attacks on the property of the U-Bahn.[3] The party published material using images from attacks captioned with the question "Safe?"[3] These were later recalled.[3] The CDU also posted billboards comparing the number of police officers cut from the force by the red-red coalition with the number of crimes committed on the city's buses and U-Bahn trains.[3] Nils Diederich, a professor of political science at the Free University of Berlin, stated prior to the election that he did not believe this would be much of an issue due to a positive mood within the city.[3]

Social Democratic Party

The SPD top candidate and mayor Klaus Wowereit stated, after "well-publicized attacks" in late winter and spring, that he planned to heighten security by increasing the number of police officers by 200 and lengthening the time video surveillance recordings are kept before being erased from 24 to 48 hours.[3]

Post-election

Election results and analysis

The Free Democratic Party (FDP) representation was removed from the Abgeordnetenhaus of Berlin after they failed to reach the 5% threshold.[8] This was the fifth time in 2011 in Germany that the Free Democrats failed to obtain representation in a state parliament. They also lost representation in Saxony-Anhalt, Rhineland-Palatinate, Bremen and Mecklenburg-Vorpommern.[9] Baden-Württemberg and Hamburg are the only states in which they reached the 5% electoral threshold in that year. The win in Berlin marks the 7th time out of seven elections in 2011 that the Social Democrats got into government.[10]

Voting problems

On 21 September 2011, election officials found that the results of the Green Party and The Left were inadvertently swapped in the Lichtenberg district. Evrim Baba-Sommer of the Green Party will replace Karin Seidel-Kalmutzki of the Social Democratic Party.[11]

On 22 September 2011, Norbert Kopp, the district mayor for Steglitz-Zehlendorf, confirmed at least 379 postal ballots had found their way into the bin of a block of flats. The ballots were properly sent to the Zehlendorf city hall and the votes could change a number of the local council seats. The police have started an investigation over the incident.[11]

Coalition talks

Initially, the Social Democrats concentrated on forming a coalition with the Greens. However, on 5 October 2011, coalition talks between the SPD and the Greens broke down.[12][13][14] The disagreement was about the extension of Bundesautobahn 100.[12][13] The Green Party platform had insisted on not extending the Bundesautobahn 100.[13] The Social Democrats offered a compromise to not go ahead with the 3.2 km extension A100 if the €420 million provided by the federal government could be invested in other transportation infrastructure projects.[13] However, the federal government rejected the possibility of transferring the money to other projects.[13] Green Party head Bettina Jarasch stated that “There was not really the will within the SPD to work together with us on a coalition” while the Berliner Zeitung wrote that "the left-wing of the SPD felt Wowereit and Müller had actually wanted to form a coalition with the CDU and had deliberately put the Greens in an impossible situation."[13] Michael Müller, chairman of Berlin chapter of the Social Democratic Party, had "threatened to look towards the CDU" over the past weekend, because the Greens "stuck to their opposition to the motorway extension".[13] Müller pointed out to the Greens "that the Red-Green coalition would only have a one-vote majority compared to the stable 10-vote majority which would be achieved in coalition with the CDU".[13] Wolfgang Thierse, deputy Parliamentary group leader, stated "that he was surprised and a little disappointed at the breakdown of talks" and "Just as Red-Green would not have been heaven for Berlin, Red-Black would not be hell".[13] Renate Künast, leader of the Berlin Chapter of the Green Party, stated that Klaus Wowereit "wanted a surrender, and no coalition".[12]

The Social Democrats therefore continued talks with the Christian Democrats so that a grand coalition that would govern Berlin was finalized on 16 November 2011.[15] According to the 100-page coalition agreement, Wowereit will continue as mayor. Also, each party receives four ministries: Social Democrats will be in charge of the Finance, City development/Environment, Education/Youth/Science, and Jobs/Integration/Women portfolios, whereas the Christian Democrats will have Interior/Sports, Economy/Technology/Research, Health/Social, and Justice/Consumer protection.[15][16] Disagreements between the two parties have been settled. There will be for example a "City tax" of 5% for hotel guests beginning in 2013 and the minimum wage for public contract jobs will increase by €1 per hour (currently at €7.50).[15] Plans were dropped for making teachers civil servants again and requiring property owners to contribute to street improvement costs.[15] Wowereit summarised the talks by saying “We want Berlin to become richer and to stay sexy.”[17]

Opinion polling

Institute Date SPD
CDU
LINKE
GRÜNE
FDP
NPD, DVU, REP
All others
Info GMBH 31 March 2011 32% 19% 11% 29% 3 % 6%
Forsa institute 26 March 2011 29% 19% 13% 24% 3 % 12%
Info GMBH[18] 6 March 2011 29.6% 20.2% 12.5% 22.2% 3.7 % 2.4% 9.3%
Forsa[19] 25 February 2011 30% 18% 13% 23% 4 % 12%
Infratest dimap[19] 16 February 2011 28% 23% 16% 23% 3 % 7 %
Forsa[19] 15 January 2011 28% 19% 14% 24% 3 % 12%
Infratest dimap[19] 10 January 2011 29% 20% 17% 25% 4 % 5 %
Forsa[20] 18 December 2010 27% 19% 15% 25% 4 % 10%
Infratest dimap[19] 8 December 2010 27% 21% 17% 27% 3 % 5 %
Forsa[19] 27 November 2010 26% 18% 16% 28% 3 % 9 %
Forsa[21] 1 November 2010 27% 17% 14% 29% 3 % 10%
Infratest dimap[22] 27 October 2010 22% 20% 17% 30% 3 % 8 %
Forsa[19] 1 October 2010 26% 16% 15% 30% 3 % 10%
Emnid[19] 13 September 2010 28% 19% 15% 25% 4 % 9 %
Infratest dimap[19] 8 September 2010 24% 22% 16% 28% 4 % 6 %

Election result

Summary of the 15 September 2013 election results for the Landtag of Bavaria
Party Votes % +/- Seats +/- Seats %
bgcolor=Template:Social Democratic Party of Germany/meta/color| Social Democratic Party (SPD) 413,332 28.3 Decrease2.5 48 Decrease5 31.6
bgcolor=Template:Christian Democratic Union of Germany/meta/color| Christian Democratic Union (CSU) 341,158 23.4 Increase2.1 39 Increase2 25.7
bgcolor=Template:Alliance 90/The Greens/meta/color| Alliance 90/The Greens (Grüne) 257,063 17.6 Increase4.5 30 Increase7 19.7
bgcolor=Template:The Left (Germany)/meta/color| The Left (Linke) 171,050 11.6 Decrease4.6 20 Decrease3 13.2
bgcolor=Template:Pirate Party Germany/meta/color| Pirate Party Germany (Piraten) 130,105 8.9 New 15 New 9.9
bgcolor=Template:National Democratic Party of Germany/meta/color| National Democratic Party (NPD) 31,241 2.1 Decrease0.4 0 ±0 0
bgcolor=Template:Free Democratic Party (Germany)/meta/color| Free Democratic Party (FDP) 26,943 1.8 Decrease5.8 0 Decrease13 0
bgcolor=Template:Human Environment Animal Protection/meta/color| Human Environment Animal Protection 21,612 1.5 Increase0.6 0 ±0 0
Pro Germany Citizens' Movement 17,829 1.2 New 0 New 0
bgcolor=Template:Other/meta/color| Others 50,732 3.5 0 ±0 0
Total 1,461,185 100.0 152 Increase11
Voter turnout 60.2 Increase2.2
Popular Vote
SPD
28.29%
CDU
23.35%
B'90/GRÜNE
17.59%
DIE LINKE
11.71%
PIRATEN
8.90%
FDP
1.84%
Other
8.32%
Landtag seats
SPD
31.57%
CDU
25.66%
B'90/GRÜNE
19.74%
DIE LINKE
13.16%
PIRATEN
9.87%

References

  1. ^ "SPD and Greens set for power in Hamburg". The Local. 13 February 2011. Retrieved 13 February 2011.
  2. ^ Berliner Wahlen 2011
  3. ^ a b c d e f g Warner, Mary Beth (9 September 2011). "Subway Beating Becomes Campaign Issue". Der Spiegel. Retrieved 11 September 2011.
  4. ^ "Germany's Pirate Party Celebrates Historic Victory". Financial Times. 19 September 2011. Retrieved 15 September 2011.
  5. ^ Scally, Derek (19 September 2011). "Berlin pirates force FDP to walk the plank". The Irish Times. Retrieved 15 September 2011.
  6. ^ "Rot-Rot war gut für ein Jahrzehnt". Die Zeit (in German). 19 September 2011. Retrieved 15 September 2011.
  7. ^ "Germany's Pirate Party Celebrates Historic Victory". Der Spiegel. 19 September 2011. Retrieved 15 September 2011.
  8. ^ a b "SPD wins Berlin vote as Pirates celebrate". The Local. 18 September 2011. Retrieved 18 September 2011.
  9. ^ "'Something is deeply wrong when the NPD is more successful than the FDP'". The Local. 5 September 2011. Retrieved 18 September 2011.
  10. ^ "Rot-Rot geht, die Generation Internet kommt". Die Welt. 18 September 2011. Retrieved 18 September 2011.
  11. ^ a b "Hundreds of Berlin votes found in a bin". The Local. 22 September 2011. Retrieved 22 September 2011.
  12. ^ a b c "Künast – "Wowereit wollte Rot-Grün scheitern lassen"". Die Welt. 5 October 2011. Retrieved 5 October 2011.
  13. ^ a b c d e f g h i "SPD and Greens drop Berlin government talks". The Local. 5 October 2011. Retrieved 5 October 2011.
  14. ^ Chambers, Madeline (5 October 2011). "Merkel's CDU could get unexpected boost in Berlin". Reuters. Retrieved 5 October 2011.
  15. ^ a b c d "City of Berlin gets 'grand coalition' government". The Local. 16 November 2011. Retrieved 16 November 2011.
  16. ^ [1] Announcement on official Berlin portal
  17. ^ "Reicher werden und sexy bleiben". FAZ. 16 November 2011. Retrieved 18 November 2011. Original German: “Wir wollen, dass Berlin reicher wird und sexy bleibt.”
  18. ^ "Umfragen Berlin". Retrieved 21 August 2011.
  19. ^ SPD beschert sich Umfragesieg. Archived 20 December 2010 at the Wayback Machine In: Berliner Zeitung, 18./19 December 2010, S. 23.
  20. ^ Die Grünen stagnieren – auf hohem Niveau. Archived 4 November 2010 at the Wayback Machine In: Berliner Zeitung, 1 November 2010.
  21. ^ BerlinTrend Oktober 2010. In: Abendschau (RBB), 27 October 2010