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2021 Baden-Württemberg state election

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State election
2021 Baden-Württemberg state election

← 201614 March 20212026 →

All 154 seats in theLandtag of Baden-Württemberg (including 34overhang andleveling seats)
78 seats needed for a majority
Turnout4,895,238 (63.8%)
Decrease 6.6%
 First partySecond partyThird party
 
KDB3460.jpg
CandidateWinfried KretschmannSusanne EisenmannAndreas Stoch
PartyGreensCDUSPD
Leader's seatNürtingen(1st)ran inStuttgart II
(not elected)
Heidenheim(2nd)
Last election47 seats, 30.3%42 seats, 27.0%19 seats, 12.7%
Seats won584219
Seat changeIncrease 11SteadySteady
Popular vote1,585,9031,168,745535,462
Percentage32.6%24.1%11.0%
SwingIncrease 2.3%Decrease 2.9%Decrease 1.7%

 Fourth partyFifth party
 
CandidateHans-Ulrich RülkeBernd Gögel
PartyFDPAfD
Leader's seatPforzheim(2nd)Enz(2nd)
Last election12 seats, 8.3%23 seats, 15.1%
Seats won1817
Seat changeIncrease 6Decrease 6
Popular vote508,278473,309
Percentage10.5%9.7%
SwingIncrease 2.2%Decrease 5.4%

Winners of each constituency
Winners of each constituency
Winning candidates in the single-member constituencies, with second mandate seats shown in the top right.

Government before election

Second Kretschmann cabinet
Green–CDU

Government after election

Third Kretschmann cabinet
Green–CDU

The2021 Baden-Württemberg state election was held on 14 March 2021 to elect the 17thLandtag of Baden-Württemberg.[1] The outgoing government was a coalition ofAlliance 90/The Greens and theChristian Democratic Union (CDU) led byMinister-PresidentWinfried Kretschmann.

The Greens remained the largest party with 32.6% of votes, an increase of twopercentage points. Their junior coalition partner, the CDU, suffered its worst result in state history, falling to 24%. The oppositionSocial Democratic Party (SPD) also recorded a decline, but rose from fourth to third place. TheFree Democratic Party (FDP) made small gains.Alternative for Germany (AfD) lost more than a third of their vote share and became the smallest party in the Landtag.[2]

The CDU and SPD each recorded no net change in seats thanks to an increase in the size of the Landtag caused by a number ofoverhang seats won by the Greens. Overall, the governing coalition was returned with an increased majority, but an alternative coalition between the Greens, SPD, and FDP also won a majority; the Greens and SPD together fell one seat short of a majority.[3] On 2 April, the Greens voted to enter negotiations with the CDU.[4] The two parties finalised a coalition agreement on 1 May.[5] Kretschmann was re-elected as Minister-President on 12 May.[6]

Election date

[edit]

The period of the 16th Landtag formally ends on 30 April 2021. The election of the 17th Landtag must take place before this date. On 24 March 2020, the state government designated 14 March 2021 as the date for the next election, in accordance with Section 19 of the State Parliament Election Act.[1] A state election was held on the same day in neighbouring state ofRhineland-Palatinate.

Electoral system

[edit]

The Landtag is elected viamixed-member proportional representation. 70 members are elected insingle-member constituencies viafirst-past-the-post voting. 50 members are then allocated using compensatory proportional representation, distributed in each of Baden-Württemberg's fourgovernment districts. Unlike other states, Baden-Württemberg does not useparty lists to fill proportional seats; instead, they are filled by the best-performing candidates who failed to be elected in the single-member constituencies. Candidates elected in this manner are listed as winning a "second mandate" (Zweitmandat) in the constituency in which they ran. The minimum size of the Landtag is 120 members, but ifoverhang seats are present, proportionalleveling seats will be added to ensure proportionality. Anelectoral threshold of 5% of valid votes is applied to the Landtag; parties that fall below this threshold are excluded.[1]

Background

[edit]
Main article:2016 Baden-Württemberg state election

In the previous election held on 13 March 2016, The Greens became the largest party for the first time in any German state, winning 30.3% of votes cast. The CDU lost 12percentage points, falling to second place on 27.0%.Alternative for Germany contested their first state election in Baden-Württemberg, placing third with 15.1%. TheSocial Democratic Party (SPD) lost almost half its voteshare and finished with 12.7%. TheFree Democratic Party (FDP) won 8.3%.

The Greens had led a coalition with the SPD since 2011, but this government lost its majority in the election. The Greens subsequently formed a coalition with the CDU, which took office asCabinet Kretschmann II.

Parties

[edit]

The table below lists the parties represented in the 16th Landtag.

#NameIdeologyLead
candidate
2016 result
Votes (%)Seats
1GrüneAlliance 90/The Greens
Bündnis 90/Die Grünen
Green politicsWinfried Kretschmann30.3%
47 / 143
2CDUChristian Democratic Union of Germany
Christlich Demokratische Union Deutschlands
Christian democracySusanne Eisenmann27.0%
42 / 143
3AfDAlternative for Germany
Alternative für Deutschland
Right-wing populismBernd Gögel [de]15.1%
23 / 143
4SPDSocial Democratic Party of Germany
Sozialdemokratische Partei Deutschlands
Social democracyAndreas Stoch12.7%
19 / 143
5FDPFree Democratic Party
Freie Demokratische Partei
Classical liberalismHans-Ulrich Rülke8.3%
12 / 143

In addition to the parties already represented in the Landtag, sixteen parties contested the election:[7]

#NameCandidates
6The Left (LINKE)70
7Ecological Democratic Party/Family and Environment (ÖDP)67
8Pirate Party Germany (Piraten)4
9Die PARTEI (PARTEI)52
10FREE VOTERS (Freie Wähler)69
11Humane World (Menschliche Welt)2
12Alliance C – Christians for Germany (Bündnis C)9
13German Communist Party (DKP)1
14dieBasis –Grassroots Democratic Party of Germany (DieBasis)60
15Democracy in Motion (DiB)3
16One for All – Party1
17Climate List Baden-Württemberg (KlimalisteBW)67
18Party of Humanists (PdH)3
19Party for Health Research (Gesundheitsforschung)2
20Party WIR2020 (W2020)68
21Volt Deutschland (Volt)44

Campaign

[edit]

Lead candidates

[edit]

On 29 May 2019, state Minister for Education, Youth, and SportsSusanne Eisenmann was confirmed as the CDU's lead candidate for the election.[8]

On 12 September 2019, Winfried Kretschmann stated that he would stand as the lead candidate for The Greens in the 2021 election, seeking a third term as Minister-President.[9]

On 1 February 2020, state party leaderAndreas Stoch was nominated as the SPD's lead candidate for the election.[10]

On 8 December 2019, the FDP state executive nominatedHans-Ulrich Rülke as their preferred lead candidate for the election. He was formally selected at a party conference in July 2020.[11] Rülke had served as leader of the FDP Landtag faction since 2009, and was the party's lead candidate in the 2016 election.[12]

In August 2020, AfD parliamentary group leaderBernd Gögel [de] advocated against the selection of a lead candidate for the election. He stated that due to the party's position and the state's unusual electoral system, the lead candidate might fall short of election to the Landtag. "If the top candidate missed entry, that would be embarrassing."[13] In January 2021, Gögel defeated deputy parliamentary group leader Emil Sänze to become lead candidate after four rounds of voting in an online member survey.[14]

On 6 December 2020, The Left nominated state spokeswomanSahra Mirow as their lead candidate for the election.[15]

Opinion polling

[edit]

Graphical summary

[edit]
Local regression of polls conducted.

Party polling

[edit]
Polling firmFieldwork dateSample
size
GrüneCDUAfDSPDFDPLinkeOthersLead
2021 state election14 Mar 202132.624.19.711.010.53.68.58.6
INSA11–12 Mar 20211,0663223131111469
Forschungsgruppe Wahlen8–11 Mar 20211,86734241110113710
INSA1–7 Mar 20211,558322512101137[a]7
Forschungsgruppe Wahlen1–4 Mar 20211,03235241110103711
Infratest dimap1–3 Mar 20211,1853325121010468
INSA8–11 Feb 20211,009312811111045[b]3
Forschungsgruppe Wahlen1–4 Feb 20211,032342811109356
Infratest dimap1–2 Feb 20211,000342710119367
INSA5–11 Jan 20211,01030301212844Tie
Infratest dimap14–16 Dec 20201,001353011107345
INSA10–16 Nov 20201,001293112117552
Infratest dimap8–13 Oct 20201,001342911116455
INSA2–9 Sep 20201,000283112127553
Infratest dimap27–28 Apr 20201,003343012116344
INSA15–20 Apr 20201,523293111137452
Infratest dimap5–10 Mar 20201,0013623141175413
INSA23–28 Oct 20191,036302713119463
Infratest dimap16–17 Sep 20191,004382612883512
INSA6–8 May 20191,040282712111066[c]1
Infratest dimap20–26 Mar 20191,002322811129444
INSA7–12 Feb 20191,006292712139552
Forsa29 Jan–1 Feb 20191,007332313996710
Infratest dimap5–10 Sep 20181,003292815117731
INSA1–6 Sep 20181,046272518129542
Forsa8–22 Feb 20181,003322712129445
Infratest dimap26–30 Jan 20181,00329291212864Tie
Infratest dimap3–7 Mar 20171,004272811207431
Infratest dimap9–13 Sep 20161,001312617137335
2016 state election13 Mar 201630.327.015.112.78.32.93.73.3

Minister-President polling

[edit]
This graph was using thelegacy Graph extension, which is no longer supported. It needs to be converted to thenew Chart extension.
Polling firmFieldwork dateSample
size
KDB3460.jpg
None/UnsureLead
Kretschmann
Grüne
Strobl
CDU
Eisenmann
CDU
Forschungsgruppe Wahlen1–4 Mar 20211,03270111959
Infratest dimap1–3 Mar 20211,18565171848
Forschungsgruppe Wahlen1–4 Feb 20211,03270131757
Infratest dimap1–2 Feb 20211,00065161349
INSA5–11 Jan 20211,01052122340
Infratest dimap8–13 Oct 20201,00166131253
Infratest dimap16–17 Sep 20191,0046913956
Infratest dimap20–26 Mar 20191,00263171246
Forsa29 Jan–1 Feb 20191,00759554
Infratest dimap5–10 Sep 20181,00367141053

Preferred coalition

[edit]
Polling firmFieldwork dateSample
size
AssessmentGrüne
CDU
CDU
Grüne
CDU
SPD
FDP
Grüne
SPD
FDP
Forschungsgruppe Wahlen1–4 Mar 20211,032Positive49342528
Negative27405146
Forschungsgruppe WahlenArchived 2021-02-05 at theWayback Machine1–4 Feb 20211,032Positive44393026
Negative32374851

Results

[edit]
First mandates by constituency (Wahlkreis)
PartyVotes%SwingSeats+/–
ConstituencyParty-listTotal
Alliance 90/The Greens (GRÜNE)1,586,19232.6Increase 2.358058Increase 11
Christian Democratic Union of Germany (CDU)1,168,97524.1Decrease 2.9123042Steady 0
Social Democratic Party of Germany (SPD)535,48911.0Decrease 1.701919Steady 0
Free Democratic Party (FDP)508,42910.5Increase 2.201818Increase 6
Alternative for Germany (AfD)473,4859.7Decrease 5.401717Decrease 6
The Left (LINKE)173,3173.6Increase 0.7000Steady 0
Free Voters (FW)146,2593.0Increase 2.9000Steady 0
Die PARTEI59,4631.2Increase 0.9000Steady 0
Grassroots Democratic Party of Germany48,4971.0New000New
Climate List Baden-Württemberg42,6850.9New000New
Party WIR202041,1280.8New000New
Ecological Democratic Party37,8190.8Increase 0.1000Steady 0
Volt Germany22,7820.5New000New
Alliance C – Christians for Germany4,0810.1Increase 0.1000Steady 0
Pirate Party Germany2,8780.1Decrease 0.3000Steady 0
Democracy in Motion1,0050.0New000New
Party of Humanists9760.0New000New
Humane World9750.0Increase 0.0000Steady 0
Party for Health Research4680.0New000New
One for All – Party1780.0New000New
German Communist Party1070.0Decrease 0.0000Steady 0
Independents4,4630.1Increase 0.100Steady 0
Total4,859,651100.07084154Increase 11
Invalid/blank votes34,8490.7
Registered voters/turnout7,671,03963.8Decrease 6.6
Source:State Returning Officer
Popular vote
GRÜNE
32.64%
CDU
24.05%
SPD
11.02%
FDP
10.46%
AfD
9.74%
LINKE
3.57%
FW
3.01%
Other
5.51%
Landtag seats
GRÜNE
37.66%
CDU
27.27%
SPD
12.34%
FDP
11.69%
AfD
11.04%
  • Green vote
    Green vote
  • CDU vote
    CDU vote
  • SPD vote
    SPD vote
  • FDP vote
    FDP vote
  • AfD vote
    AfD vote
  • Linke vote
    Linke vote
  • FW vote
    FW vote

Aftermath

[edit]

The CDU suffered its worst ever result in the state, falling to 24%. Lead candidate Susanne Eisenmann, whose approval ratings as a minister were described by theTagesschau as "moderate to bad", claimed responsibility for the poor result. However, factors such as disputes about the state government's response to theCOVID-19 pandemic, and the "mask scandal" which broke a few days before the election, were cited as contributing factors.[16]

Both the incumbent Green–CDU coalition and an alternative centre-left "traffic light coalition" of the Greens, SPD, and FDP garnered a majority, leading to speculation about a possible change in the governing arrangement.[16] Combined with the successful re-election of a traffic light government in neighbouringRhineland-Palatinate the same day, this sparked discussion about the arrangement nationally, including its viability on the federal level.[17] However, the Greens of Baden-Württemberg are considered to be more conservative by the national party standards, with Kretschmann himself identifying as a green conservative and has been associated with economically liberal viewpoints, in addition to being a practicing Catholic.[18][19][20]

Government formation

[edit]

After the election, Minister-President Kretschmann invited all parties except the AfD to exploratory talks, beginning with the CDU. This somewhat dampened speculation about a possible realignment of the governing coalition, though Kretschmann stated there was no special significance behind the decision to meet with the CDU first.[21] On 2 April, the state Greens voted to enter negotiations with the CDU.[4] The two parties finalised a coalition agreement on 1 May.[5]

On 12 May, Kretschmann was elected as Minister-President for a third term by the Landtag. He won 95 votes with 55 against. The new ministry was sworn in the same day, comprising six Green and five CDU ministers.[6]

See also

[edit]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^Free Voters 2%, Others 5%.
  2. ^Free Voters 1%, Others 4%.
  3. ^Free Voters 2%, Others 4%.

References

[edit]
  1. ^abc"Landtagswahl 2021". Baden-Württemberg Ministry for the Interior, Digitalisation, and Migration. Archived fromthe original on 2021-02-26. Retrieved2020-05-27.
  2. ^"This is how Baden-Württemberg voted - current results".Der Spiegel. 15 March 2021.
  3. ^Knight, Ben (14 March 2021)."Angela Merkel's CDU takes major hit in regional elections — early results".Deutsche Welle. Retrieved14 March 2021.
  4. ^ab"Greens want to continue to govern with the CDU". Mdr.de. 2 April 2021.
  5. ^ab"Green-black coalition in Baden-Württemberg is in place".Der Spiegel (in German). 1 May 2021.
  6. ^ab"Third term: Landtag elects Winfried Kretschmann as Prime Minister of Baden-Württemberg".Südwestrundfunk (in German). 12 May 2021. Archived fromthe original on 12 May 2021. Retrieved12 May 2021.
  7. ^"Which parties are standing for election?". Baden-Württemberg State Returning Officer. 22 January 2021.
  8. ^"Volle Understützung für Eisenmann". Tagblatt.de. 29 May 2019. Archived fromthe original on 5 June 2020. Retrieved27 May 2020.
  9. ^"Winfried Kretschmann will bei Landtagswahl 2021 erneut antreten".Spiegel Online. 12 September 2019.
  10. ^"Stoch soll Südwest-SPD in Landtagswahl 2021 führen". stimme.de. 1 February 2020.
  11. ^"Group leader Rülke leads the southwest FDP in state elections".Schwäbische Zeitung. 18 July 2020.
  12. ^"Baden-Württemberg: FDP-Vorstand für Rülke als Spitzenkandidat für Landtagswahl". n-tv.de. 8 December 2019.
  13. ^"Gögel against the creation of an AfD top candidate". N-tv.de. 18 August 2020.
  14. ^"AfD has chosen Gögel as the top candidate in the fourth attempt". N-tv.de. 31 January 2021.
  15. ^"Sahra Mirow nominated as the top candidate of The Left". Rhein-Neckar-Zeitung. 6 December 2020.
  16. ^ab"A green election winner with options".Tagesschau. 15 March 2021.
  17. ^"Landtag elections in Rhineland-Palatinate and Baden-Württemberg: a traffic light signal for the republic".Der Spiegel. 14 March 2021.
  18. ^Oltermann, Philip (2016-03-12)."How one German region is bucking the rightwing trend by going green".The Guardian.ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved2023-04-11.
  19. ^deutschlandfunkkultur.de."Grüner Ministerpräsident Winfried Kretschmann - "Konservative streben nach notwendigen Reformen"".Deutschlandfunk Kultur (in German). Retrieved2023-04-11.
  20. ^"Europe's Greens search for life after death".POLITICO. 2017-04-06. Retrieved2023-04-11.
  21. ^"Kretschmann initially wants to conduct exploratory talks with the CDU".Der Spiegel. 14 March 2021.
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