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Volkskammer

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Unicameral legislature of East Germany

People's Chamber

Volkskammer
German Democratic Republic
State Arms of East Germany
Type
Type
History
Founded7 October 1949 (1949-10-07)
Disbanded3 October 1990 (1990-10-03)
Preceded byReichstag (Nazi Germany) 1933–1945
Länderkammer (East Germany) 1949–1958
Succeeded byBundestag
Leadership
President
Vice President/Deputy President
Structure
Seats400
10th Volkskammer
1st Volkskammer
Political groups
Government (303)

Opposition (97)

Government (466)
National Front
  •  SED (110)
  •  CDU (67)
  •  LDPD (66)
  •  FDGB (49)
  •  NDPD (35)
  •  DBD (33)
  •  FDJ (25)
  •  KB (24)
  •  DFD (20)
  •  VVN-BdA (19)
  •  VdgB (12)
  •  SPD (6)First government
  • Elections
    First election
    15 October 1950
    Last election
    18 March 1990
    Meeting place
    Palace of the Republic
    Palace of the Republic, East Berlin
    Constitution
    Constitution of East Germany
    • Elections
    • Referendums

    TheVolkskammer (German:[ˈfɔlkskamɐ], "People's Chamber") was thesupreme power organ ofEast Germany. It was the only branch of government in the state, and per the principle ofunified power, all state organs were subservient to it.

    The Volkskammer was initially thelower house of abicameral legislature. Theupper house was theChamber of States, orLänderkammer, but in 1952 thestates of East Germany were dissolved, and the Chamber of States was abolished in 1958.Constitutionally, the Volkskammer was the highest organ of state power in the GDR, and both constitutions vested it with great lawmaking powers. All other branches of government, including the judiciary, were responsible to it. By 1960, the chamber appointed theState Council (the GDR's collective head of state), theCouncil of Ministers (the GDR's government), and theNational Defence Council (the GDR's collective military leadership).

    In practice, however, like most communist legislatures, it was arubber stamp body that did little more than ratify decisions already made by theSED Politburo. By the 1970s and before thePeaceful Revolution, the Volkskammer only met two to four times a year.[1]

    Membership

    [edit]

    In October 1949 theVolksrat ("People's Council"), charged with drafting theConstitution of East Germany, proclaimed itself theVolkskammer and requested official recognition as anational legislature from theSoviet Military Administration in Germany. This was granted by Soviet Deputy Foreign MinisterAndrei Gromyko. The Volkskammer then convened with the Länderkammer to electWilhelm Pieck as the firstPresident of East Germany andOtto Grotewohl as the firstPrime Minister of East Germany.[2]

    From its founding in 1949 until the firstcompetitive elections inMarch 1990, all members of the Volkskammer were elected via a single list from theNational Front, apopular front/electoral alliance dominated by the SED. In addition, seats were also allocated to various organizations affiliated with the SED, such as theFree German Youth. Effectively, the SED held control over the composition of the Volkskammer.[3] In any event, the minor parties in the National Front were largely subservient to the SED, and were required to accept the SED's "leading role" as a condition of their continued existence.[4]

    The members of the People's Chamber were elected in multi-memberconstituencies, with four to eight seats. To be elected, a candidate needed to receive half of the valid votes cast in their constituency. If, within a constituency, an insufficient number of candidates got the majority needed to fill all the seats, asecond round was held within 90 days. If the number of candidates getting this majority exceeds the number of seats in the respective constituency, the order of the candidates on the election list decided who got to sit in the Volkskammer. Candidates who lost out on a seat because of this would become successor candidates who would fillcasual vacancies which might occur during a legislative period.[5]

    Only one list of candidates appeared on a ballot paper; voters simply took the ballot paper and dropped it into the ballot box. Those who wanted to vote against the National Front list had to vote using a separate ballot box, without any secrecy.[6] The table below shows an overview of the reported results of all parliamentary elections before 1990, with the resulting disposition of parliamentary seats.

    ElectionTurnoutAgreeDistribution of parliamentary seats
    SEDCDULDPDDBDNDPDFDGBFDJKBDFDSPDVdgBVVN
    195098.53%99.9%110676633354925242061219
    195498.51%99.4%117525252525329291812
    195898.90%99.9%117525252525329291812
    196399.25%99.9%1275252525268403522
    196799.82%99.9%1275252525268403522
    197198.48%99.5%1275252525268403522
    197698.58%99.8%1275252525268403522
    198199.21%99.9%1275252525268403522
    198699.74%99.9%127525252526837213214

    In 1976, the Volkskammer moved into a specially constructed building on Marx-Engels-Platz (nowSchloßplatz again), thePalace of the Republic (Palast der Republik). Prior to this, the Volkskammer met atLangenbeck-Virchow-Haus [de] in the Mitte district of Berlin.

    Initially, voters inEast Berlin could not take part in elections to the Volkskammer, in which they were represented by indirectly elected non-voting members, but in 1979 the electoral law was changed to provide for 66 directly elected deputies with full voting rights.[7]

    Protester, January 1990
    Ballot for the 1990 elections (written text reads "Sample")

    With the advent of thePeaceful revolution, a new electoral law was passed on 20 February 1990, reducing the Volkskammer to 400 members and establishing their competitive election usingparty-list proportional representation, with noelectoral threshold. Seats were calculated nationally using thelargest remainder method, and distributed in multi-member constituencies corresponding to the fifteenBezirke.[8]

    After the1990 election, the disposition of the parties was as follows:

    Party/GroupAcronymMembers
    Alliance for GermanyCDU,DA,DSU192
    Social Democratic Party in the GDRSPD88
    Party of Democratic SocialismPDS, former SED66
    Association of Free DemocratsDFP,FDP,LDP21
    Alliance 90B9012
    Green Party andIndependent Women's AssociationGrüne, UFV8
    National Democratic Party of GermanyNDPD2
    Democratic Women's League of GermanyDFD1
    United LeftVL1

    Presidents of the People's Chamber

    [edit]

    The president of the People's Chamber was the third-highest state post in the GDR (after the chairman of the Council of Ministers and the chairman of the State Council) and was theex officio vice president during the existence of theoffice of president. As such, on two occasions, the president of the People's Chamber served as acting president for brief periods in 1949 and 1960. The last president of the People's Chamber,Sabine Bergmann-Pohl, was also interim head of state during the last six months of East Germany's existence due to theState Council having been abolished.

    The presidency of the People's Chamber was held by abloc party representative for most of that body's existence to keep up the appearance that the GDR was led by a broad coalition. Only one SED member ever held the post.

    NameEntered officeLeft officeParty
    Johannes Dieckmann7 October 194922 February 1969LDPD
    Gerald Götting12 May 196929 October 1976CDU
    Horst Sindermann29 October 197613 November 1989SED
    Günther Maleuda13 November 19895 April 1990DBD
    Sabine Bergmann-Pohl5 April 19902 October 1990CDU

    Parties and organizations represented

    [edit]

    National front parties

    [edit]
    PartyEmblemFlagFoundationDissolutionSeats in the Volkskammer(1986)
    Socialist Unity Party
    SED
    21 April 194616 December 1989127
    Christian Democratic Union
    CDU
    26 June 19451/2 October 199052
    Liberal Democratic Party
    LDPD
    5 July 194527 March 199052
    Democratic Farmers' Party
    DBD
    17 June 194815 September 199052
    National Democratic Party
    NDPD
    5 May 194827 March 199052

    National front organizations

    [edit]
    OrganizationEmblemFlagFoundationDissolutionAssigned representatives in the Volkskammer(1986)
    Free German Trade Union Federation
    FDGB
    1946199061
    Free German Youth
    FDJ
    1946exists today37
    Democratic Women's League of Germany
    DFD
    1947199032
    Cultural Association of the DDR
    KB
    1945199021
    Peasants Mutual Aid Association
    VdgB
    1945199414

    Parties and organizations in the 1990 Volkskammer

    [edit]
    PartyEmblemFoundationDissolutionSeats in the Volkskammer(1990 election)
    Christian Democratic Union
    CDU
    26 June 19451/2 October 1990163
    Social Democratic Party
    SPD
    7 October 198926 September 199088
    Party of Democratic Socialism
    PDS
    16 December 198916 June 200766
    German Social Union
    DSU
    20 January 1990exists today25
    Liberal Democratic Party
    LDPD
    5 July 194527 March 199010
    Democratic Farmers' Party
    DBD
    17 June 194815 September 19909
    Green Party
    GP
    9 February 19903 December 19908
    German Forum Party
    DFP
    27 January 199011 August 19907
    New Forum
    NF
    9/10 September 198921 September 19917
    Free Democratic Party
    FDP
    4 February 199011 August 19904
    Democratic Awakening
    DA
    29 October 19894 August 19904
    Democracy Now
    DJ
    12 September 198921 September 19913
    National Democratic Party
    NDPD
    5 May 194827 March 19902
    Initiative for Peace and Human Rights
    IFM
    24 January 198621 September 19912
    Democratic Women's League of Germany
    DFD
    8 March 194726 October 19901
    United Left
    VL
    2 October 198919921

    Results

    [edit]

    1949 East German Constitutional Assembly election (first)

    [edit]
    Party or allianceVotes%Seats
    Democratic Bloc (East Germany)Socialist Unity Party of Germany7,943,94966.07450
    Christian Democratic Union (East Germany)225
    Liberal Democratic Party of Germany225
    Cooperatives100
    Democratic Farmers' Party of Germany75
    National Democratic Party of Germany (East Germany)75
    Democratic Women's League of Germany50
    Free German Trade Union Federation50
    Free German Youth50
    Cultural Association of the GDR50
    Peasants Mutual Aid Association50
    Union of Persecutees of the Nazi Regime50
    Social Democratic Party in the GDR25
    Independents50
    Against4,080,27233.930
    Total12,024,221100.001,525

    1986 East German general election (final under the SED)

    [edit]
    Party or allianceVotes%Seats
    National Front of the German Democratic RepublicSocialist Unity Party of Germany12,392,09499.94127
    Free German Trade Union Federation61
    Christian Democratic Union (East Germany)52
    Liberal Democratic Party of Germany52
    National Democratic Party of Germany (East Germany)52
    Democratic Farmers' Party of Germany52
    Free German Youth37
    Democratic Women's League of Germany32
    Cultural Association of the GDR21
    Peasants Mutual Aid Association14
    Against7,5120.060
    Total12,399,606100.00500

    1990 East German general election (final)

    [edit]
    Party or allianceVotes%Seats+/–
    Alliance for GermanyChristian Democratic Union4,710,59840.82163+111
    German Social Union727,7306.3125New
    Democratic Awakening106,1460.924New
    Total5,544,47448.04192+140
    Social Democratic Party2,525,53421.8888New
    Party of Democratic Socialism1,892,38116.4066–61
    Association of Free Democrats608,9355.2821–31
    Alliance 90336,0742.9112New
    Democratic Farmers' Party251,2262.189–43
    Green PartyIndependent Women's Association226,9321.978New
    National Democratic Party44,2920.382–50
    Democratic Women's League38,1920.331–31
    United Left20,3420.181New
    Alternative Youth List (DJP–GJMJVFDJ)14,6160.130–37
    Christian League10,6910.090New
    Communist Party8,8190.080New
    Independent Social Democratic Party3,8910.030New
    European Federalist Party3,6360.030New
    Independent People's Party3,0070.030New
    German Beer Drinkers' Union2,5340.020New
    Spartacist Workers Party2,4170.020New
    Unity Now2,3960.020New
    Federation of Socialist Workers3860.000New
    Association of Working Groups for Work Policy and Democracy3800.000New
    Total11,541,155100.004000
    Valid votes11,541,15599.45
    Invalid/blank votes63,2630.55
    Total votes11,604,418100.00
    Registered voters/turnout12,426,44393.38
    Source: Nohlen & Stöver,[9]IPU,Wahlen in Deutschland

    See also

    [edit]

    Notes

    [edit]
    1. ^Lower house ofbicameral legislature until 8 December 1958
    1. ^
    2. ^
    3. ^
    4. ^
    5. ^

    References

    [edit]
    1. ^Pötzl, Norbert F. (18 March 2020)."Letzte DDR-Volkskammer-Wahl vor 30 Jahren: Sieg der D-Mark".Der Spiegel (in German).ISSN 2195-1349. Retrieved9 November 2023.
    2. ^Naimark, Norman M.The Russians In Germany: a History of the Soviet Zone of Occupation, 1945-1949. E-book, Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 1995
    3. ^Kurt Sontheimer & Wilhelm Bleek.The Government and Politics of East Germany. New York: St. Martin's Press. 1975. p. 66.
    4. ^Andreas Malchya: Der Ausba des neuen Systems 1949 bis 1961,Bundeszentrale für politische Bildung, last retrieved 2022-07-28.
    5. ^"German Democratic Republic"(PDF).Chron. XX (1985-1986). Inter-Parliamentary Union. pp. 75–77. Retrieved29 April 2020.
    6. ^Sebestyen, Victor (2009).Revolution 1989: The Fall of the Soviet Empire. New York City:Pantheon Books.ISBN 978-0-375-42532-5.[page needed]
    7. ^Webb, Adrian (9 September 2014).Longman Companion to Germany since 1945. Routledge. p. 244.ISBN 9781317884231.
    8. ^"People's Chamber Election Law"(PDF). 20 February 1990.
    9. ^Dieter Nohlen & Philip Stöver (2010)Elections in Europe: A data handbook, p779ISBN 978-3-8329-5609-7

    External links

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