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Next German federal election

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Next German federal election

← 2025On or before 25 March 2029

All 630 seats in theBundestag
316 seats needed for a majority
Opinion polls
 
2025-02-23 Bundestagswahl – Wahlabend CDU by Sandro Halank–026 (3x4 cropped).jpg
AfD leadership 2021.jpg
2025-05-05 Unterzeichnung des Koalitionsvertrages der 21. Wahlperiode des Bundestages by Sandro Halank–033.jpg
2021-12-07 Unterzeichnung des Koalitionsvertrages der 20. Wahlperiode des Bundestages by Sandro Halank–100.jpg
LeaderFriedrich MerzAlice Weidel
Tino Chrupalla
Bärbel Bas
Lars Klingbeil
PartyCDU/CSUAfDSPD
Last election28.5%, 208 seats20.8%, 152 seats16.4%, 120 seats

 
Franziska Brantner, 2023 im Ministerium für Wirtschaft und Klimaschutz.jpg
MKr365420 Felix Banaszak (Grüne BDK 2024).jpg
Ines Schwerdtner, 2023.jpg
Hart aber fair 2024-03-04-8268.jpg
LeaderFranziska Brantner
Felix Banaszak
Ines Schwerdtner
Jan van Aken
PartyGreensLinke
Last election11.6%, 85 seats8.8%, 64 seats

A map ofBundestag constituencies used at the 2025 election.

IncumbentGovernment

Merz cabinet
CDU/CSU–SPD



Thenext German federal election to elect the members of the 22ndBundestag, following the recent23 February 2025 election, will be held before 26 March 2029.

Background

[edit]

Date assignment

[edit]

TheBasic Law and the Federal Election Act provide that regular federal elections must be held on a Sunday or on a national holiday[a] no earlier than 46 and no later than 48 months after the start of a legislative session. The 21st Bundestag was constituted on March 25, 2025 and has therefore been in session for 7 months. Accordingly, a scheduled federal election would have to take place on one of the following dates:

  • 28 January 2029
  • 4, 11, 18, 25 February 2029 or
  • 4, 11, 18, 25 March 2029

The exact date will be determined by thepresident of Germany in due course.[1]

Federal elections can be held earlier, if the President of Germany dissolves the Bundestag and schedules asnap election, which is however only possible under two scenarios described by the Basic Law:

  1. Failed election of chancellor: If the Bundestag fails to elect a chancellor with an absolute majority of its members by the 15th day after the first ballot, the president is free to either appoint the candidate who received a plurality of votes on the last ballot as chancellor or to dissolve the Bundestag (in accordance with Article 63, Section 4 of the Basic Law).
  2. Lostmotion of confidence by the chancellor: The chancellor has the right to submit a motion to the Bundestag for a vote of confidence in him. If this motion fails, the Chancellor has various options for action, including requesting the President to dissolve the Bundestag. The President is free to accept or reject this request (in accordance with Article 68 of the Basic Law).

In both cases, federal snap elections would have to take place on a Sunday or national holiday no later than 60 days after the dissolution.[2][3][b]

No elections can be held during a state of defense; if this prolongs a legislative period, new elections must be held no later than six months after the end of the state of defense.

Electoral system

[edit]
Bundestag ballot from the2025 election in theKassel district.The column for the constituency vote (with the name, occupation, and address of each candidate) is on the left in black print; the column for the party list vote (showing top five list candidates in the state) is on the right in blue print.
See also:List of German Bundestag constituencies andState list (Germany)

Germany uses themixed-member proportional representation system, a system ofproportional representation combined with elements offirst-past-the-post voting. Every elector has two votes: a constituency vote (first vote) and a party list vote (second vote). Based solely on the first votes, 299 members are elected insingle-member constituencies by first-past-the-post voting. The proportional distribution of seats among the parties is calculated on the basis of the second votes. The seats won by a party through the second votes are then distributed internally among the states, depending on how many second votes the party received in the individual states (theSainte-Laguë method is used both for the distribution of seats between the parties and for the internal distribution of a party's seats among the states). In most cases, the number of constituencies won by a party in a given state does not exactly correspond to the number of seats to which the party is entitled in that state proportionally. This is balanced in two different ways:

  • If a party wins fewer constituencies in a state than it is entitled to based on the second-vote result, the highest-placed candidates from the state list are elected accordingly to the additional seats.
  • If a party wins more constituency seats in a state than its second votes would entitle it to, the principle of second vote coverage (Zweitstimmendeckung) applies. This means that only the correspondent number of constituency winners with the highest percentage of first votes receive a seat. Constituency winners who have not won a seat in this case are given priority over the candidates on the respective state list in the event that a member leaves parliament prematurely during the legislative session.

To qualify for any seats, however, a party must either win three single-member constituencies via first votes (basic mandate clause [de]) or exceed athreshold of 5% of the second votes nationwide. This does not apply to independent constituency candidates, however: these always enter the Bundestag if they win their constituency, which hardly ever happens. There werethree in 1949, with candidates that were related to parties.[4]

Parties representing recognized national minorities (currentlyDanes,Frisians,Sorbs, andRomani people) are exempt from both the 5% national threshold and the basic mandate clause, but must still meet state-level qualifications. The only party that so far has been willing and able to benefit from this provision on thefederal level is theSouth Schleswig Voters' Association, which represents the minorities of Danes and Frisians inSchleswig-Holstein and managed to win a seat in1949,2021, and2025.[5]

The electoral law described here was adopted in 2023 and was used for the first time in the 2025 election. At the time, the CDU/CSU-faction criticized in particular the new aspect of so-called second vote coverage, and intends to reform electoral law again so that all constituency winners are once again guaranteed a seat, as had been the case before 2023. It is therefore possible that this electoral law will be changed before the next election.[6]

Political parties and leaders

[edit]
Germany'spolitical landscape withgoverning coalitions in 15 of 16 states, with seats in theBundesrat, as of December 2024
See also:List of political parties in Germany

Single party governments are unusual in Germany, a recent exception was theFirst Söder cabinet (CSU) until 2018 in Bavaria, and since 2022 is theRehlinger cabinet (SPD) in the Saarland. TheAlternative for Germany (AfD) is considered far-right by all other major parties; they have joined a "firewall" policy that rejects cooperation and tries to get AfD declared as illegal. Thus, for the time being, two-party or three-party government coalitions on federal and state levels are formed by CDU/CSU and SPD with various degree of support from Greens, Left, FDP, BSW, and FW.

The table below lists the parties represented in the21st Bundestag.

PartiesLeader(s)Leading candidate(s)IdeologySeatsStatus
Last election (2025)Before election (current)
CDU/CSUChristian Democratic Union of Germany
Christlich Demokratische Union Deutschlands
Friedrich MerzChristian democracy
164 / 630
164 / 630
Governing coalition
Christian Social Union in Bavaria
Christlich-Soziale Union in Bayern
Markus Söder
44 / 630
44 / 630
Alternative for Germany
Alternative für Deutschland
Alice Weidel
Tino Chrupalla
Right-wing populism
Völkisch nationalism
152 / 630
151 / 630
Opposition
Social Democratic Party of Germany
Sozialdemokratische Partei Deutschlands
Saskia Esken
Lars Klingbeil
Social democracy
120 / 630
120 / 630
Governing coalition
Alliance 90/The Greens
Bündnis 90/Die Grünen
Franziska Brantner
Felix Banaszak
Green politics
85 / 630
85 / 630
Opposition
The Left
Die Linke
Ines Schwerdtner
Jan van Aken
Democratic socialism
64 / 630
64 / 630
Opposition
UngroupedSSWChristian DirschauerDanish and
Frisian minority interests
1 / 630
1 / 630
Opposition

Opinion polls

[edit]
Main article:Opinion polling for the next German federal election
Opinion polling for the 2029 German federal election using Local regression (LOESS) of polls conducted.
Opinion polling for the 2029 German federal election usingLocal regression (LOESS) of polls conducted.

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^In Germany, with the exception of theGerman Unity Day, all holidays are determined on the state level, and because of that, they do not necessarily apply for all German states. Currently, legal holidays in all states areNew Year's Day,Good Friday,Easter Monday,Labour Day,Ascension Day,Whit Monday,German Unity Day, FirstChristmas Day, and Second Christmas Day (Boxing Day).
  2. ^Possibility 1 has not happened since 1949; possibility 2 has been used a total of four times (in 1972, 1982, 2005, and 2025).

References

[edit]
  1. ^"§ 16 BWahlG – Einzelnorm".gesetze-im-internet.de.Archived from the original on 17 November 2020. Retrieved24 April 2019.
  2. ^"Wahl zum 19. Deutschen Bundestag am 24. September 2017". Der Bundeswahlleiter.Archived from the original on 8 November 2020. Retrieved26 September 2017.
  3. ^Martin Fehndrich (26 February 2017)."Bundeskanzlerwahl". Wahlrecht.de.Archived from the original on 8 May 2022. Retrieved26 September 2017.
  4. ^"Unabhängige Direktkandidaten bei Bundestagswahlen – Wahlrechtslexikon".www.wahlrecht.de. Retrieved29 October 2025.
  5. ^NDR (26 September 2021),Stefan Seidler (SSW): "Die ersten Zahlen sind sensationell" (in German), archived fromthe original on 26 September 2021, retrieved27 September 2021
  6. ^"Neues Wahlrecht zieht Folgen und politische Diskussionen nach sich".deutschlandfunk.de (in German). 26 February 2025.
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