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{{Short description|Federal parliament of Germany}} {{about|the current parliament of Germany|the governing body of the German Confederation from 1815 to 1866|Bundesversammlung (German Confederation)|other historical parliaments of Germany|Reichstag (disambiguation)}} {{Use dmy dates|date=September 2023}} {{Infobox legislature | background_color = #000000 | name = German Bundestag | native_name = {{lang|de|Deutscher Bundestag}} | legislature = [[List of members of the 21st Bundestag|21st Bundestag]] | coa_pic = Deutscher Bundestag logo.svg{{!}}class=skin-invert | coa_res = 150px | preceded_by = {{ubl | Historically: [[Reichstag (Nazi Germany)|Reichstag]] ([[Nazi Germany]], 1933–1945) | ''De jure:'' [[Reichstag (Weimar Republic)|Reichstag]] ([[Weimar Republic]], 1919–1933) }} | established = {{start date and age|df=y|1949|9|7}} | leader1_type = [[President of the Bundestag|President]] | leader1 = [[Julia Klöckner]] | party1 = [[CDU/CSU]] | election1 = 25 March 2025 | leader2_type = [[Presidium of the Bundestag|Vice presidents]] | leader2 = [[Josephine Ortleb]] | party2 = [[Social Democratic Party of Germany|SPD]] | election2 = 25 March 2025 | leader3_type = | leader3 = [[Andrea Lindholz]] | party3 = [[CDU/CSU]] | election3 = 25 March 2025 | leader4_type = | leader4 = [[Omid Nouripour]] | party4 = [[Alliance 90/The Greens]] | election4 = 25 March 2025 | leader5_type = | leader5 = [[Bodo Ramelow]] | party5 = [[The Left (Germany)|The Left]] | election5 = 25 March 2025 | leader6_type = | leader6 = ''Vacant'' | party6 = [[Alternative for Germany|AfD]]{{efn|name=vp_afd|The Rules of Procedure of the Bundestag (German: ''Geschäftsordnung'') allocate one Vice-President to each political group (''Fraktion''). However, each candidate must still be elected by a parliamentary majority. Due to the candidates put forth by the AfD and their unanimous rejection by all other parties, no AfD candidate has reached such a majority.}} | leader8_type = [[President by right of age of the Bundestag|President by right of age]] | leader8 = [[Gregor Gysi]] | party8 = [[The Left (Germany)|The Left]] | election8 = 25 March 2025 | leader9_type = [[Chancellor of Germany|Chancellor]] | leader9 = [[Friedrich Merz]] | party9 = [[CDU/CSU]] | election9 = 6 May 2025 | leader10_type = [[Leader of the Opposition (Germany)|Leader of the Opposition]]{{efn|Though the by-laws of the Bundestag do not mention such a position, the leader of the largest opposition ''Fraktion'' is called leader of the opposition by convention.}} | leader10 = [[Alice Weidel]]<br>[[Tino Chrupalla]] | election10 = 6 May 2025 | party10 = [[Alternative for Germany|AfD]] | members = 630 | structure1 = File:Bundestag_(current_composition).svg | structure1_res = 250px | political_groups1 = '''[[Merz cabinet|Government]] (328)''' :{{Color box|{{party color|CDU/CSU}}|border=silver}} [[CDU/CSU]] (208) :*{{Color box|{{party color|Christian Democratic Union of Germany}}|border=silver}} [[Christian Democratic Union of Germany|CDU]] (164) :*{{Color box|{{party color|Christian Social Union in Bavaria}}|border=silver}} [[Christian Social Union in Bavaria|CSU]] (44) :{{Color box|{{party color|Social Democratic Party of Germany}}|border=silver}} [[Social Democratic Party of Germany|SPD]] (120) '''Opposition (302)''' :{{Color box|{{party color|Alternative for Germany}}|border=silver}} [[Alternative for Germany|AfD]] (151) :{{Color box|{{party color|Alliance 90/The Greens}}|border=silver}} [[Alliance 90/The Greens|The Greens]] (85) :{{Color box|{{party color|The Left (Germany)}}|border=silver}} [[The Left (Germany)|The Left]] (64) :{{Color box|{{party color|Independent politician}}|border=silver}} Non-attached (2) :*{{Color box|{{party color|South Schleswig Voters' Association}}|border=silver}} [[South Schleswig Voters' Association|SSW]] ([[Stefan Seidler|1]]) :*{{Color box|{{party color|Independent}}|border=silver}} [[Independent politician|Independent]] ([[Sieghard Knodel|1]]) | voting_system1 = [[Mixed-member proportional representation]] (MMP) | last_election1 = [[2025 German federal election|23 February 2025]] | next_election1 = [[2029 German federal election|On or before 25 March 2029]] | session_room = Deutscher Bundestag Plenarsaal Seitenansicht.jpg | meeting_place = [[Reichstag building]]<br>[[Mitte]], Berlin, Germany | website = {{URL|https://www.bundestag.de/|bundestag.de}} | constitution = [[Basic Law for the Federal Republic of Germany]] | rules = [https://www.btg-bestellservice.de/pdf/80060000.pdf Rules of Procedure of the German Bundestag and Mediation Committee] (English) }} {{PoliticsGermany}} The '''Bundestag''' ({{IPA|de|ˈbʊndəstaːk|lang|De-Bundestag2.ogg}}, "Federal [[Diet (assembly)|Diet]]") is the [[Germany|German]] [[Federalism in Germany|federal]] parliament. It is the only constitutional body of the federation directly elected by the German people. The Bundestag was established by Title III{{efn|Articles 38 to 49}} of the [[Basic Law for the Federal Republic of Germany]] ({{Lang|de|Grundgesetz}}) in 1949 as one of the legislative bodies of Germany, the other being the [[German Bundesrat|Bundesrat]]. It is thus the historical successor to the earlier [[Reichstag (Weimar Republic)|Reichstag]]. The members of the Bundestag are representatives of the German people as a whole, are not bound by any orders or instructions and are only accountable to their conscience.{{efn|Article 38 Section 1 ''Grundgesetz''}} As of the current [[21st Bundestag|21st legislative period]], the Bundestag has a fixed number of 630 members. The Bundestag is elected every four years by German citizens{{efn|German Citizens are defined in Article 116 ''Grundgesetz''}} aged 18 and older.{{efn|name=law_eligibility|Article 38 Section 2 ''[[Grundgesetz]]'': Any person who has attained the age of eighteen shall be entitled to vote; any person who has attained the age of majority may be elected.}} Elections use a [[mixed-member proportional representation]] system which combines [[First-past-the-post voting]] for constituency-seats with [[State list (Germany)|proportional representation]] to ensure its composition mirrors the [[Popular vote (representative democracy)|national popular vote]]. The German Bundestag cannot dissolve itself; only the [[president of Germany]] can do so under certain conditions. Together with the Bundesrat, the Bundestag forms the legislative branch of government on federal level. The Bundestag is considerably more powerful than the Bundesrat, which represents the state governments. All bills must first be passed in the Bundestag before they are discussed in the Bundesrat. The Bundesrat can only accept laws passed by the Bundestag without amendment. Only in some areas, where laws directly affect the states, can the Bundesrat reject laws; otherwise, it can only lodge an objection to them, which the Bundestag can overrule. Above all, however, the [[Chancellor of Germany|chancellor]] and the [[Cabinet of Germany|federal government]] are solely responsible to the Bundestag. The Bundestag also has sole budgetary authority. The Bundestag's presiding officer is the [[president of the Bundestag]]; he or she is deputized by the Vice Presidents of the Bundestag. Since 2025, [[Julia Klöckner]] of the [[CDU/CSU]] is the president of the Bundestag. In the [[German order of precedence|protocol order of the federation]], the President of the Bundestag ranks second after the President and before the Chancellor. Since 1999, the Bundestag has met in the [[Reichstag building]] in Berlin.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.wegderdemokratie.de/en/plenarsaal-deutscher-bundestag|title=Plenarsaal "Deutscher Bundestag" – The Path of Democracy|website=www.wegderdemokratie.de|language=en|access-date=11 December 2019}}</ref> The Bundestag also operates in multiple new government buildings in Berlin around the [[Renaissance Revival architecture|neo-renaissance]] house and has its own [[German Parliament Police|police force]] (the [[German Parliament Police|''Bundestagspolizei'']]), directly subordinated to the [[President of the Bundestag|Bundestag Presidency]]. ==History== [[File:Reichstag, Berlín, Alemania, 2016-04-21, DD 46-48 HDR.jpg|thumb|left|The ''German Unity Flag'' is a national memorial to [[German reunification]] that was raised on 3 October 1990; it waves in front of the [[Reichstag building]] in Berlin, seat of the Bundestag.]] The first body to be called [[Federal Convention (German Confederation)|Bundestag]] was the legislative body of the [[German Confederation]], which convened in [[Frankfurt am Main]] from 1816 to 1866. This Bundestag was a convention of state envoys. During the [[German revolutions of 1848–1849|revolution of 1848/49]], the National Assembly, which met in [[Frankfurt am Main]], was the first elected german parliament and served as a constituent assembly for a German state, which ultimately did not come to pass. The [[North German Confederation]], founded in 1866/67, was the first German nation state with an established elected parliament, however this ended up being called the [[Reichstag (German Empire)|Reichstag]]. In 1870/71, the federation was expanded to include the southern German territories and was henceforth called the [[German Empire]]. The Reichstag building, where the current Bundestag meets since 1999 (see below), was built in 1888. The German Empire was not yet a parliamentary democracy in the modern sense, but a constitutional monarchy with democratic elements. The Reichstag had to approve all bills, had the right to initiate legislation and, in particular, had budgetary sovereignty. However, the Chancellor and the imperial government were not responsible to parliament, but to the emperor alone. It was not until 1918, a few weeks before the end of the [[First World War]], that the Reichstag was given the right, as part of a [[German constitutional reforms of October 1918|constitutional reform]], to [[no-confidence vote|withdraw its confidence]] in the Chancellor and thus force him to resign. There was also no universal suffrage for the Reichstag; only men over the age of 25 were entitled to vote in Reichstag elections. After its defeat in the First World War, Germany became a republic and a parliamentary democracy with the [[Weimar Constitution]] of 1919. The voting age was lowered to 21 years and women were given the right to vote for (and serve in) the Reichstag. However, the first German democracy failed for various reasons, some of which were directly related to the Reichstag. The pure proportional representation system in elections did not produce clear majorities and the various parties were not sufficiently willing to compromise to form stable governments. This led to numerous changes of government and snap elections. In the last years of the Weimar Republic, the extreme right and extreme left parties had a destructive majority in the Reichstag, which forced the governments to rule largely by emergency decrees to bypass parliament. In 1933, [[Adolf Hitler]] was appointed chancellor and through the [[Reichstag Fire Decree]], the [[Enabling Act of 1933]] and the death of President [[Paul von Hindenburg]] in 1934, gained unlimited power. After this, the Reichstag, in which only the Nazi Party was represented from November 1933 on, met only rarely, above all to extend the emergency laws on which the Nazi dictatorship was formally based. It last convened on 26 April 1942. With the [[Basic Law for the Federal Republic of Germany|Basic Law of 1949]], Germany's second democratic constitution, the Bundestag was established as the new parliament. Due to the division of Germany, the Bundestag was de facto a West German parliament until 1990. The socialist GDR in East Germany had its own parliament, the People's Chamber, which, however, did not emerge from democratic elections except for its last electoral term in 1990. Because [[West Berlin]] was not officially under the jurisdiction of the Basic Law during the division, the Bundestag met in [[Bonn]] in several different buildings, including (provisionally) a former waterworks facility and finally in the [[Bundeshaus (Bonn)|Bundeshaus]]. In addition, owing to the city's legal status, citizens of West Berlin were unable to vote in elections to the Bundestag, and were instead represented by 22 non-voting delegates<ref>[https://books.google.com/books?id=F54jJBcrs50C&dq=bundestag+west+berlin+22&pg=PA34 ''Germany at the Polls: The Bundestag Elections of the 1980s''], Karl H. Cerny, Duke University Press, 1990, page 34</ref> chosen by the [[House of Representatives of Berlin|House of Representatives]], the city's legislature.<ref>[http://www.ipu.org/parline-e/reports/arc/GERMANY_FEDERAL_REPUBLIC_1980.PDF GERMANY (FEDERAL REPUBLIC OF) Date of Elections: 5 October 1980], [[International Parliamentary Union]]</ref> <!-- EVERYTHING BELOW LACKS SOURCES. PLEASE add them if possible! --> Since German reunification in 1990, the Bundestag has once again been a pan-German parliament. In 1999, the German parliament moved from Bonn to Berlin and sits once again in the Reichstag building. ==Tasks== ===Legislative process=== Together with the [[Bundesrat (Germany)|Bundesrat]], the Bundestag forms the [[legislative branch]] of the [[Politics of Germany|German political system]]. The Bundestag is one of three constitutional bodies (along with the Bundesrat and the federal government) that have the right of initiative for the legislative process. In order to introduce a bill in the Bundestag, the support of a faction or of a number of MPs corresponding to at least 5% of all MPs is required. All bills (including those introduced by the Bundesrat and the government) are first voted on in the Bundestag (for bills from the Bundesrat and the government, however, an opinion must first be obtained from the other body). A bill is first discussed at first reading, then referred to one or more committees, where it can be amended; the resulting committee version then goes back to the plenary, where it is passed at second and third reading. Amendments can also be tabled at this stage. A simple majority (more yes votes than no votes and abstentions combined) is required for normal legislative proposals. In some very rare cases, the Basic Law requires the so-called [[chancellor majority]] (majority of all members of parliament) for simple laws, for example to establish new intermediate and subordinate federal authorities. Laws amending the Basic Law require a two-thirds majority of all members of the Bundestag. A law passed by the Bundestag is passed on to the Bundesrat. Laws that directly affect the states must be passed by the Bundesrat by majority vote (amendments to the Basic Law, again, by a two-thirds majority); all other laws are considered passed if the Bundesrat does not object to them within 14 days. An objection by the Bundesrat can be overruled by the Bundestag with a chancellor majority if the Bundesrat has not raised the objection with a two-thirds majority (in the latter case, in order to override an objection, a two-thirds majority of members present corresponding at least to the chancellor majority is necessary). In no case can the Bundesrat make amendments to a bill. If the Bundesrat rejects a bill, the matter is often referred to the so-called mediation committee, a body made up of an equal number of members of the Bundestag and Bundesrat, which attempts to negotiate whether the bill can find the approval of both chambers with certain amendments. A version amended in this way must then be passed again by a majority in both chambers in order to become law (in this case the rules of procedure of both chambers provide for an abbreviated legislative procedure). In the final step, a law must be signed by the President of Germany (they have a right of veto in theory, but this has been used very rarely in the history of the Federal Republic). ===Elections=== The Bundestag has an elective function for a number of offices. ====Chancellor==== The chancellor is elected by the Bundestag and formally appointed by the president of Germany. A chancellor's election is necessary whenever the office of chancellor has fallen vacant. This is the case if a newly elected Bundestag meets for the first time, or during legislative periods, if the former chancellor died or resigned. The chancellor's election is one of the few cases in which a vote in the Bundestag requires a [[Chancellor majority|majority of all elected members]], not just a majority of those assembled at the time, the so-called ''Kanzlermehrheit'' ("chancellor majority"). As with other elections performed by the Bundestag, the chancellor is elected via secret ballot. The election procedure laid down in the Basic Law can be divided into three phases:<ref>Basic Law, Article 63.</ref> The process begins with the [[President of Germany]] proposing a candidate to the Bundestag (usually a candidate on which the majority party or the coalition parties have agreed to beforehand), who is then voted upon without debate ("1st voting phase"). If the nominee reaches the necessary "chancellor majority", the president appoints him or her and, after that, the president of the Bundestag will administer the oath of office before the assembled house. If this nominee is not elected, the right of nomination is transferred onto the Bundestag: Candidates can now be nominated for election, whereby a nomination must be supported by at least a quarter of all MPs. The Bundestag can hold any number of ballots in this manner for two weeks. To be elected, a candidate still needs a "chancellor majority" of yes-votes ("Second voting phase"). If the Bundestag is unable to elect a chancellor in these fourteen days, a final ballot is held on the very next day. Once again, candidates can be nominated by at least a quarter of all MPs. Candidates receiving a "chancellor majority" in this ballot are elected. Otherwise, it is up to the President of Germany either to appoint the candidate with the plurality of votes as Chancellor or to dissolve the Bundestag and call new elections ("Third voting phase"). Another possibility to vote a new chancellor into office is the [[constructive vote of no confidence]], which allows the Bundestag to replace a sitting chancellor, if it elects a new chancellor with the "chancellor-majority". As of 2025, all chancellors of the federal republic have been (re-)elected on proposal of the President and on the first ballot with the exceptions of [[Helmut Kohl]], who was elected to his first term via a constructive vote of no confidence against [[Helmut Schmidt]] in 1982, and [[Friedrich Merz]], who was elected chancellor during the second voting phase (on the second ballot), after not having received the necessary majority on the first ballot in 2025. ====Judges of the federal constitutional court==== The Bundestag shares responsibility with the Bundesrat for electing the judges of the Federal Constitutional Court. Both chambers elect four judges to each of the court's two senates. They also elect the president and vice-president of the Federal Constitutional Court in alternating order. In the Bundestag, this requires a two-thirds majority of members present, which has equal at least a majority of all members. ====Further elective functions==== In addition to these central elections, the Bundestag elects the President and Vice President of the Federal Audit Office, the Commissioner for the Armed Forces, the Federal Commissioner for Data Protection and Freedom of Information, the Federal Commissioner for the Victims of the SED Dictatorship, two-thirds of the members of the [[Joint Committee (Germany)|Joint Committee]] and half of the members of the Mediation Committee. The Bundestag also has significant influence on the election of the [[President of Germany]]: All members of the Bundestag are ex officio members of the [[Federal Convention (Germany)|Federal Convention]], a non-permanent constitutional body whose sole task is to elect the president; however, the convention also includes state electors, elected by the [[State Parliament (Germany)|sixteen german state parliaments]]. The majority ratios in the Bundestag therefore do not necessarily have to correspond to those in the Federal Assembly. == Electoral term and principle of discontinuation == [[File:Chart Basic Law of the Federal Republic of Germany EN.svg|thumb|The Bundestag within the political system of Germany]] The Bundestag is elected for four years, and new elections must be held no earlier than 46 and no later than 48 months after the beginning of a given legislative session. By way of exception, there may be an early election if the President of Germany dissolves the Bundestag. However, the President only has the right to do so in the event of a failed chancellor election or if an incumbent chancellor requests dissolution after losing a vote of confidence. The possibility of an early election is therefore much more limited than is the case in other parliamentary democracies. This restriction is intended to encourage the parliamentary groups to cooperate in difficult situations and is a lesson learned from the experience of the Weimar Republic, in which snap elections were very frequent because the parties were unable to compromise and form stable governments. In constitutional reality however, the deliberately lost vote of confidence (also known as a false vote of confidence) has established itself as a way for the chancellor to bring about new elections, de facto at his or her discretion (this has happened four times so far: 1972, 1982/83, 2005 and 2024/25).{{efn|In contrast, there have only been two "genuine" votes of confidence (1982 and 2001) that the respective chancellor actually intended to win.}} A legislative session ends in the moment, a newly elected Bundestag convenes for the first time, which must occur within 30 days after an election.<ref name="Electoral term">{{cite web |url=https://www.gesetze-im-internet.de/englisch_gg/englisch_gg.html#p0197 |title= Basic Law, Article 39: Electoral term – Convening| access-date=29 September 2017}}</ref> The principle applies that there can be no 'period without parliament'. An elected Bundestag is fully competent to act until a newly elected Bundestag convenes for its first session. Prorogations and dissolutions (in the strict sense), as known in the Westminster system, do not exist in Germany. Even an early dissolution of the Bundestag, as described above, in practice only leads to an early election, but does not end the legislative period itself. Before a constitutional amendment in 1976, the "Standing Committee" took the place of the Bundestag with all its rights after dissolution by the President or 48 months after its constitution until a new Bundestag was constituted.<ref>{{Cite book |language=de |page=28 |title=Der Bundestag: Eine Darstellung seiner Aufgaben und seiner Arbeitsweise |trans-title=The Bundestag: Its tasks and procedures|last= Schäfer| first=Friedrich |isbn=9783322836434 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=JefKBgAAQBAJ |date=2013 |publisher=VS Verlag für Sozialwissenschaften}}</ref> Since then, a legislative session generally only ends when the new Bundestag convenes, meaning that lame duck sessions can occur in the four weeks following an election. This has happened four times so far: {| class="wikitable" |- ! Legislative Session !! Session !! Date !! Reason or subject !! Plenary protocoll |- | 13th || 248th || 16 October 1998 || Government statement by Foreign Minister Klaus Kinkel<hr>Resolution on participation in the air operations planned by NATO in the Kosovo conflict || |- | 15th || 187th || 26 September 2005 || Resolution on continuation of the participation of armed German forces in the deployment of an International Security Assistance Force in Afghanistan under NATO leadership || |- | 20th || 213th || 13 March 2025 || Motion to amend the Basic Law (amendment of Art. 109 and 115 and introduction of Art. 143 h), first reading || |- | 20th || 214th || 18 March 2025 || Motion to amend the Basic Law (amendment of Art. 109 and 115 and introduction of Art. 143 h), second and third reading || |} <!-- The historical reasons for this constitutional arrangement (Weimar + 1976) should possibly be discussed --> <!-- Parts of the following section should probably be moved here and the section heading changed to "Electoral term and premature dissolution" --> Following the tradition of German parliamentarism, the Bundestag is subject to the ''principle of discontinuation'', meaning that a newly elected Bundestag is legally regarded to be a body and entity completely different from the previous Bundestag. This leads to the result that any motion, application or action submitted to the previous Bundestag, e.g. a bill referred to the Bundestag by the Federal Government, is regarded as void by non-decision (German terminology: "''Die Sache fällt der Diskontinuität anheim''"). Thus any bill that has not been decided upon by the beginning of the new electoral period must be brought up by the government again if it aims to uphold the motion, this procedure in effect delaying the passage of the bill. Furthermore, any newly elected Bundestag will have to freshly decide on the rules of procedure (''Geschäftsordnung''), which is done by a formal decision of taking over such rules from the preceding Bundestag by reference. If the succeeding Bundestag convents with same or similar majorities like its predecessor, the parliament can decide to take over earlier initiatives of legislation in the same fashion to abbreviate the process, thus effectively breaking the principle of discontinuation by a pull. ==Election and membership== ===Election system (since 2023)=== {{See also|List of German Bundestag constituencies|State list (Germany)}} After the imperial Reichstag was elected according to a pure first-past-the-post electoral system (with run-off elections) and the Reichstag of the Weimar Republic according to a pure proportional representation system, [[mixed-member proportional representation]], a system combining [[proportional representation]] with elements of [[first-past-the-post voting]], has been used for the Bundestag since the founding of the Federal Republic. Before an electoral reform in 2023, the Bundestag nominally had 598 members, with the mixture of majority and proportional representation regularly leading to a large number of additional overhang and compensation mandates.<ref name="Matthias Cantow-2017">{{cite web|author1=Martin Fehndrich|author2=Wilko Zicht|author3=Matthias Cantow|url=http://www.wahlrecht.de/bundestag/index.htm|title=Wahlsystem der Bundestagswahl|publisher=Wahlrecht.de|date=22 September 2017|access-date=26 September 2017}}</ref> In 2023, this was remedied with a series of modifications that led to a fixed number of seats of 630 and significantly increased the proportional aspect; after this revised electoral law was confirmed by the Federal Constitutional Court with some modifications following constitutional complaints, it was applied for the first time in [[2025 German federal election|2025]]. 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 in [[single-member constituency|single-member constituencies]] by first-past-the-post voting. The second votes are used to produce a proportional number of seats for parties, first on the federal level and then on state level ([[Sainte-Laguë method]]). 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 via second votes. This is balanced in two different ways: *If a party wins more constituency seats in a state than its second votes would entitle it to, only the correspondent number of constituency winners with the highest percentage of first votes are elected.{{efn|Before 2023, overhang seats were added for the surplus constituency seats a party had won, and levelling seats added to maintain the proportional share of other parties. Levelling seats were also added to maintain the proportional share of seats between different states.}} *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. To qualify for any seats, however, a party must either win three single-member constituencies via first votes ({{Ill|Basic mandate clause|lt=basic mandate clause|de|Grundmandat}}) or exceed a [[electoral threshold|threshold]] of 5% of the second votes nationwide. This does not apply to independent constituency candidates: these always enter the Bundestag if they win their constituency (however, no independent constituency candidate has managed to win a constituency since [[1949 West Germany federal election|1949]]). Seats allocated in this way are subtracted from the base number of 630 when the mandates are distributed among the parties. In addition, the second votes of voters who have elected a successful independent constituency candidate are not taken into account when calculating the number of mandates (although they are for the 5% threshold). Parties representing recognized national minorities (currently [[Danes#Danish diaspora|Danes]], [[Frisians]], [[Sorbs]], and [[Romani people]]) are exempt from both the 5% national threshold and the basic mandate clause. The only party that has been able to benefit from this provision so far on the federal level is the [[South Schleswig Voters' Association]], which represents the minorities of Danes and Frisians in [[Schleswig-Holstein]] and managed to win a seat in [[1949 West German federal election|1949]], [[2021 German federal election|2021]], and [[2025 German federal election|2025]].<ref>{{Citation|last=NDR|title=Stefan Seidler (SSW): "Die ersten Zahlen sind sensationell"|date=26 September 2021|url=https://www.ndr.de/nachrichten/schleswig-holstein/bundestagswahl_2021/Stefan-Seidler-SSW-Die-ersten-Zahlen-sind-sensationell,shmag86702.html|language=de|access-date=27 September 2021}}</ref> [[File:Bundestagswahl 05 stimmzett.jpg|thumb|right|Bundestag ballot from the [[2005 German federal election|2005 election]] in the [[Würzburg]] 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.]] ===Succession in case of early retirement=== If a member of parliament leaves the Bundestag during the current legislative session, either through resignation or death, another candidate from that party from the corresponding state takes their place. Successful constituency candidates who did not receive a seat in the previous election due to the principle of second vote coverage are considered first, followed by the candidates on the respective state list. However, if the list is exhausted, the seat in question remains vacant for the remainder of the session. If the departing member was an independent constituency candidate, the seat also remains empty. ==Latest election result== ===Regular election of 2025=== The latest federal election was held on Sunday, 23 February 2025, to elect the members of the 21st Bundestag. {{See also|2025 German federal election}} {{See also|Results of the 2025 German federal election}} {{Election results |image=[[File:21st Bundestag.svg]] |firstround=Party list<!-- second votes -->|secondround=Constituency<!-- first votes --> |party1=[[Christian Democratic Union of Germany|Christian Democratic Union]]|votes1=11194700|seats1=36|votes1_2=12601967|seats1_2=128|totseats1=164|sc1=+12 |party2=[[Alternative for Germany]]|votes2=10327148|seats2=110|votes2_2=10175438|seats2_2=42|totseats2=152|sc2=+69 |party3=[[Social Democratic Party of Germany|Social Democratic Party]]|votes3=8148284|seats3=76|votes3_2=9934614|seats3_2=44|totseats3=120|sc3=–86 |party4=[[Alliance 90/The Greens]]|votes4=5761476|seats4=73|votes4_2=5442912|seats4_2=12|totseats4=85|sc4=–33 |party5=[[The Left (Germany)|The Left]]|votes5=4355382|seats5=58|votes5_2=3932584|seats5_2=6|totseats5=64|sc5=+25 |party6=[[Christian Social Union in Bavaria|Christian Social Union]]|votes6=2963732|seats6=0|votes6_2=3271730|seats6_2=44|totseats6=44|sc6=–1 |party7=[[Sahra Wagenknecht Alliance]]|votes7=2468670|seats7=0|votes7_2=299226|seats7_2=0|totseats7=0|sc7=New |party8=[[Free Democratic Party (Germany)|Free Democratic Party]]|votes8=2148878 |seats8=0|votes8_2=1623351|seats8_2=0|totseats8=0|sc8=–91 |party9=[[Free Voters]]|votes9=769170|seats9=0|votes9_2=1254488|seats9_2=0|totseats9=0|sc9=0 |party10=[[Human Environment Animal Protection Party]]|votes10=482032|seats10=0|votes10_2=82485|seats10_2=0|totseats10=0|sc10=0 |party11=[[Volt Germany]]|votes11=355146|seats11=0|votes11_2=391577|seats11_2=0|totseats11=0|sc11=0 |party12=[[Die PARTEI]]|votes12=242806|seats12=0|votes12_2=122386|seats12_2=0|totseats12=0|sc12=0 |party13=[[Grassroots Democratic Party of Germany]]|votes13=85557|seats13=0|votes13_2=41903|seats13_2=0|totseats13=0|sc13=0 |party14=[[Bündnis Deutschland]]|votes14=79012|seats14=0|votes14_2=88046|seats14_2=0|totseats14=0|sc14=New |party15=[[South Schleswig Voters' Association]]|votes15=76126 |seats15=1|votes15_2=58773|seats15_2=0|totseats15=1|sc15=0 |party16=[[Ecological Democratic Party]]|votes16=49730|seats16=0|votes16_2=54641|seats16_2=0|totseats16=0|sc16=0 |party17=[[Team Todenhöfer]]|votes17=24558|seats17=0|votes17_2=9757 |seats17_2=0|totseats17=0|sc17=0 |party18=[[Party of Progress (Germany)|Party of Progress]]|votes18=21377|seats18=0|votes18_2=1282|seats18_2=0|totseats18=0|sc18=0 |party19=[[Marxist–Leninist Party of Germany]]|votes19=19876|seats19=0|votes19_2=24208|seats19_2=0|totseats19=0|sc19=0 |party20=[[Party of Humanists]]|votes20=14446|seats20=0|votes20_2=1873|seats20_2=0|totseats20=0|sc20=0 |party21=[[Pirate Party Germany]]|votes21=13809|seats21=0|votes21_2=2152|seats21_2=0|totseats21=0|sc21=0 |party22=[[Bavaria Party]]|votes22=12315|seats22=0|votes22_2=5784|seats22_2=0|totseats22=0|sc22=0 |party23=[[Alliance C – Christians for Germany]]|votes23=11784|seats23=0|votes23_2=2021|seats23_2=0|totseats23=0|sc23=0 |party24=[[MERA25]]|votes24=7128|seats24=0|votes24_2=658|seats24_2=0|totseats24=0|sc24=New |party25=[[Values Union]]|votes25=6803|seats25=0|votes25_2=2844|seats25_2=0|totseats25=0|sc25=New |party26=[[Bürgerrechtsbewegung Solidarität]]|votes26=719|seats26=0|votes26_2=1303|seats26_2=0|totseats26=0|sc26=0 |party27=[[Human World (political party)|Human World]]|votes27=694|seats27=0|totseats27=0|sc27=0 |party28=[[Socialist Equality Party (Germany)|Socialist Equality Party]]|votes28=425|seats28=0|votes28_2=73|seats28_2=0|totseats28=0|sc28=0 |party29=[[Party for Rejuvenation Research]]|votes29=304|seats29=0|totseats29=0|sc29=0 |party30=Independents|votes30_2=70110|seats30_2=0|totseats30=0|sc30=0 |total_sc=–105 |invalid=285228|invalid2=429129 |electorate=60490603|electorate2=60490603 |source=[https://www.bundeswahlleiterin.de/en/bundestagswahlen/2025/ergebnisse/bund-99.html Federal Returning Officer] }} ==List of Bundestag by session== {| class="wikitable" |- ! colspan="10" style="background:#eecdab; text-align:center;"| Seat distribution in the German Bundestag (at the beginning of each session) |- style="background:#ffffff" ! style="width:100px;"| Session ! style="width:100px;"| Election ! style="width:100px;"| Seats ! style="width:85px;"| [[Christian Democratic Union of Germany|CDU]]/[[Christian Social Union in Bavaria|CSU]] ! style="width:85px;"| [[Social Democratic Party of Germany|SPD]] ! style="width:85px;"| [[Free Democratic Party (Germany)|FDP]] ! style="width:85px;"| [[Alliance 90/The Greens|Greens]]{{efn|1983 to 1994 The Greens and 1990 to 1994 [[Alliance 90]], since 1994 [[Alliance '90/The Greens|Alliance 90/The Greens]]}} ! style="width:85px;"| [[The Left (Germany)|The Left]]{{efn|1990 to 2005 [[Partei des Demokratischen Sozialismus|PDS]] (Party of Democratic Socialism), 2005 to 2007 [[The Left Party.PDS]], since 2007 [[The Left (Germany)|The Left]]}} ! style="width:80px;"| [[Alternative for Germany|AfD]] ! style="width:80px;"| Others<br />''Sonstige'' |- style="text-align:center; background:cornsilk;" | |'''[[First German Bundestag|1st]]''' || '''[[1949 West German federal election|1949]]''' | 402 || style="background:#82E0AA;"| 139 || 131 || style="background:#82E0AA;"| 52 || – || – || – || style="background:#82E0AA;"| 80{{efn|[[German Party (1947)|DP]] 17, [[Bavaria Party|BP]] 17, [[Communist Party of Germany|KPD]] 15, [[Economic Reconstruction Union|WAV]] 12, [[Centre Party (Germany)|Centre Party]] 10, [[Deutsche Rechtspartei|DKP-DRP]] 5, [[South Schleswig Voter Federation|SSW]] 1, [[Independent politician|Independents]] 3}} |- style="text-align:center; background:cornsilk;" | '''[[Second German Bundestag|2nd]]''' || '''[[1953 West German federal election|1953]]''' | 487 || style="background:#82E0AA;"| 243 || 151 || style="background:#82E0AA;"| 48 || – || – || – || style="background:#82E0AA;"| 45{{efn|[[German Party (1947)|DP]] 15, [[All-German Bloc/League of Expellees and Deprived of Rights|GB/BHE]] 27, [[Centre Party (Germany)|Centre Party]] 3}} |- style="text-align:center; background:cornsilk;" | '''[[List of members of the 3rd Bundestag|3rd]]''' || '''[[1957 West German federal election|1957]]''' | 497 || style="background:#82E0AA;"| 270 || 169 || 41 || – || – || – || style="background:#82E0AA;"| 17{{efn|[[German Party (1947)|DP]]}} |- style="text-align:center; background:cornsilk;" | '''[[List of members of the 4th Bundestag|4th]]''' || '''[[1961 West German federal election|1961]]''' | 499 || style="background:#82E0AA;"| 242 || 190 || style="background:#82E0AA;"| 67 || – || – || – || – |- style="text-align:center; background:cornsilk;" | '''[[List of members of the 5th Bundestag|5th]]''' || '''[[1965 West German federal election|1965]]''' | 496 || style="background:#82E0AA;"| 245 || style="background:#82E0AA;"| 202 || 49 || – || – || – || – |- style="text-align:center; background:cornsilk;" | '''[[List of members of the 6th Bundestag|6th]]''' || '''[[1969 West German federal election|1969]]''' | 496 || 242 || style="background:#82E0AA;"| 224 || style="background:#82E0AA;"| 30 || – || – || – || – |- style="text-align:center; background:cornsilk;" | '''[[List of members of the 7th Bundestag|7th]]''' || '''[[1972 West German federal election|1972]]''' | 496 || 225 || style="background:#82E0AA;"| 230 || style="background:#82E0AA;"| 41 || – || – || – || – |- style="text-align:center; background:cornsilk;" | '''[[List of members of the 8th Bundestag|8th]]''' || '''[[1976 West German federal election|1976]]''' | 496 || 243 || style="background:#82E0AA;"| 214 || style="background:#82E0AA;"| 39 || – || – || – || – |- style="text-align:center; background:cornsilk;" | '''[[List of members of the 9th Bundestag|9th]]''' || '''[[1980 West German federal election|1980]]''' | 497 || 226 || style="background:#82E0AA;"| 218 || style="background:#82E0AA;"| 53 || – || – || – || – |- style="text-align:center; background:cornsilk;" | '''[[List of members of the 10th Bundestag|10th]]''' || '''[[1983 West German federal election|1983]]''' | 498 || style="background:#82E0AA;"| 244 || 193 || style="background:#82E0AA;"| 34 || 27 || – || – || – |- style="text-align:center; background:cornsilk;" | '''[[List of members of the 11th Bundestag|11th]]''' || '''[[1987 West German federal election|1987]]''' | 497 || style="background:#82E0AA;"| 223 || 186 || style="background:#82E0AA;"| 46 || 42 || – || – || – |- style="text-align:center; background:cornsilk;" | '''[[List of members of the 12th Bundestag|12th]]''' || '''[[1990 German federal election|1990]]''' | 662 || style="background:#82E0AA;"| 319 || 239 || style="background:#82E0AA;"| 79 || 8 || 17 || – || – |- style="text-align:center; background:cornsilk;" | '''[[List of members of the 13th Bundestag|13th]]''' || '''[[1994 German federal election|1994]]''' | 672 || style="background:#82E0AA;"| 294 || 252 || style="background:#82E0AA;"| 47 || 49 || 30 || – || – |- style="text-align:center; background:cornsilk;" | '''[[List of members of the 14th Bundestag|14th]]''' || '''[[1998 German federal election|1998]]''' | 669 || 245 || style="background:#82E0AA;"| 298 || 43 || style="background:#82E0AA;"| 47 || 36 || – || – |- style="text-align:center; background:cornsilk;" | '''[[List of members of the 15th Bundestag|15th]]''' || '''[[2002 German federal election|2002]]''' | 603 || 248 || style="background:#82E0AA;"| 251 || 47 || style="background:#82E0AA;"| 55 || 2 || – || – |- style="text-align:center; background:cornsilk;" | '''[[List of members of the 16th Bundestag|16th]]''' || '''[[2005 German federal election|2005]]''' | 614 || style="background:#82E0AA;"| 226 || style="background:#82E0AA;"| 222 || 61 || 51 || 54 || – || – |- style="text-align:center; background:cornsilk;" | '''[[List of members of the 17th Bundestag|17th]]''' || '''[[2009 German federal election|2009]]''' | 622 || style="background:#82E0AA;"| 239 || 146 || style="background:#82E0AA;"| 93 || 68 || 76 || – || – |- style="text-align:center; background:cornsilk;" | '''[[List of members of the 18th Bundestag|18th]]''' || '''[[2013 German federal election|2013]]''' | 630 || style="background:#82E0AA;"| 311 || style="background:#82E0AA;"| 192 || – || 63 || 64 || – || – |- style="text-align:center; background:cornsilk;" | '''[[List of members of the 19th Bundestag|19th]]''' || '''[[2017 German federal election|2017]]''' | 709 || style="background:#82E0AA;"| 246 || style="background:#82E0AA;"| 153 || 80 || 67 || 69 || 94 || – |- style="text-align:center; background:cornsilk;" | '''[[List of members of the 20th Bundestag|20th]]''' || '''[[2021 German federal election|2021]]''' | 736(735){{efn|The FDP lost a seat in the repeat of a small part of the election in 2024.}} || 197 || style="background:#82E0AA;"| 206 || style="background:#82E0AA;"| 92(91) || style="background:#82E0AA;"| 118 || 39 || 83 || 1{{efn|name=SSW|[[South Schleswig Voters' Association|SSW]]}} |- style="text-align:center; background:cornsilk;" | '''[[List of members of the 21st Bundestag|21st]]''' || '''[[2025 German federal election|2025]]''' | 630 || style="background:#82E0AA;"| 208 || style="background:#82E0AA;"| 120 || – || 85 || 64 || 152 || 1{{efn|name=SSW}} |} {{legend|#82E0AA|Parties in the ruling coalition}} {{Image frame | caption = Seat distribution in the Bundestag from 1949 to 2021 {{div col|colwidth=12em}} {{legend|#BE3075|[[The Left (Germany)|Left]]}} {{legend|#EB001F|[[Social Democratic Party of Germany|SPD]]}} {{legend|#64A12D|[[Alliance 90/The Greens|Green]]}} {{legend|#003C8F|[[South Schleswig Voters' Association|SSW]]}} {{legend|#FFED00|[[Free Democratic Party (Germany)|FDP]]}} {{legend|#000000|[[Christian Democratic Union of Germany|CDU]]}} {{legend|#008AC5|[[Christian Social Union in Bavaria|CSU]]}} {{legend|#009EE0|[[Alternative for Germany|AfD]]}} {{div col end}} Parties that were only present between 1949 and 1957 {{div col|colwidth=10em}} {{legend|#AAAAAA|Others}} {{legend|#0047AB|[[Centre Party (Germany)|Centre]]}} {{legend|#63B8FF|[[German Party (1947)|DP]]}} {{legend|#C3C318|[[All-German Bloc/League of Expellees and Deprived of Rights|GB/BHE]]}} {{div col end}} | align = center | content = {{Graph:Chart | width = 500 | height = 400 | type = stackedrect | xAxisAngle = 45 | yAxisFormat = % | yAxisMax = 1 <!-- | showValues = format:.0%, fontcolor:white, offset:10 --> | colors = #BE3075, #EB001F, #64A12D, #003C8F, #AAAAAA, #FFED00, #0047AB, #000000, #008AC5, #63B8FF, #C3C318, #009EE0 <!-- | legend = German federal election results --> | x = 1949, 1953, 1957, 1961, 1965, 1969, 1972, 1976, 1980, 1983, 1987, 1990, 1994, 1998, 2002, 2005, 2009, 2013, 2017, 2021 | y8Title = CDU | y8 = 0.28537, 0.38703, 0.42775, 0.38580, 0.38996, 0.38803, 0.35907, 0.38803, 0.35645, 0.38846, 0.35645, 0.40483, 0.36310, 0.29596, 0.31509, 0.29316, 0.31190, 0.40412, 0.28209, 0.20544 | y9Title = CSU | y9 = 0.05854, 0.10216, 0.10597, 0.09597, 0.09459, 0.09459, 0.09266, 0.10232, 0.10019, 0.10192, 0.09441, 0.07704, 0.07440, 0.07025, 0.09619, 0.07492, 0.07235, 0.08875, 0.06488, 0.06122 | y2Title = SPD | y2 = 0.33171, 0.31827, 0.34875, 0.38964, 0.41892, 0.45753, 0.46718, 0.43243, 0.43931, 0.38846, 0.37187, 0.36103, 0.37500, 0.44544, 0.41625, 0.36156, 0.23473, 0.30586, 0.21580, 0.28027 | y6Title = FDP | y6 = 0.12927, 0.10413, 0.08478, 0.12860, 0.09653, 0.05985, 0.08108, 0.07722, 0.10405, 0.06731, 0.09249, 0.11934, 0.06994, 0.06428, 0.07794, 0.09935, 0.14952, , 0.11283, 0.12517 | y3Title = Green | y3 = , , , , , , , , , 0.05385, 0.08478, 0.01208, 0.07292, 0.07025, 0.09121, 0.08306, 0.10932, 0.09984, 0.09450, 0.16054 | y1Title = Left | y1 = , , , , , , , , , , , 0.02568, 0.04464, 0.05381, 0.00332, 0.08795, 0.12219, 0.10143, 0.09732, 0.05306 | y12Title = AfD | y12 = , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , 0.13258, 0.11293 | y4Title = SSW | y4 = 0.00244, , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , 0.00136 | y10Title = DP | y10 = 0.04146, 0.02947, 0.03276 | y7Title = Centre | y7 = 0.02439, 0.00589 | y11Title = GB/BHE | y11 = , 0.05305 | y5Title = Others | y5 = 0.12683 }} }} {{clear}} {{Timeline of political parties in the German Bundestag}} ==Presidents since 1949== {| class="wikitable" |+ Presidents of the Bundestag |- ! style="width:12px;"|No. ! style="width:280px;"|Name ! style="width:20px;"|Party ! style="width:180px;"|Beginning of term ! style="width:180px;"|End of term ! style="width:180px;"|Length of term |- | 1 | [[Erich Köhler]] (1892–1958) | style="text-align:center;"|[[Christian Democratic Union of Germany|CDU]] | style="text-align:center;"|7 September 1949 | style="text-align:center;"|18 October 1950{{efn|Resigned for medical reasons}} | style="text-align:center;"|{{age in years and days|1949|09|07|1950|10|18}} |- | 2 | [[Hermann Ehlers]] (1904–1954) | style="text-align:center;"|[[Christian Democratic Union of Germany|CDU]] | style="text-align:center;"|19 October 1950 | style="text-align:center;"|29 October 1954{{efn|Died in office}} | style="text-align:center;"|{{age in years and days|1950|10|19|1954|10|29}} |- | 3 | [[Eugen Gerstenmaier]] (1906–1986) | style="text-align:center;"|[[Christian Democratic Union of Germany|CDU]] | style="text-align:center;"|16 November 1954 | style="text-align:center;"|31 January 1969{{efn|name="politres"|Resigned for political reasons}} | style="text-align:center;"|{{age in years and days|1954|11|16|1969|01|31}} |- | 4 | [[Kai-Uwe von Hassel]] (1913–1997) | style="text-align:center;"|[[Christian Democratic Union of Germany|CDU]] | style="text-align:center;"|5 February 1969 | style="text-align:center;"|13 December 1972 | style="text-align:center;"|{{age in years and days|1969|02|05|1972|12|13}} |- |style="background:#FFE8E8;" |5 |style="background:#FFE8E8;" |[[Annemarie Renger]]{{efn|First woman to hold the post}} (1919–2008) | style="background:#ffe8e8; text-align:center;"|[[Social Democratic Party of Germany|SPD]] | style="background:#ffe8e8; text-align:center;"|13 December 1972 | style="background:#ffe8e8; text-align:center;"|14 December 1976 | style="background:#ffe8e8; text-align:center;"|{{age in years and days|1972|12|13|1976|12|14}} |- | 6 | [[Karl Carstens]] (1914–1992) | style="text-align:center;"|[[Christian Democratic Union of Germany|CDU]] | style="text-align:center;"|14 December 1976 | style="text-align:center;"|31 May 1979{{efn|Elected [[President of Germany]]}} | style="text-align:center;"|{{age in years and days|1976|12|14|1979|05|31}} |- | 7 | [[Richard Stücklen]] (1916–2002) | style="text-align:center;"|[[Christian Social Union of Bavaria|CSU]] | style="text-align:center;"|31 May 1979 | style="text-align:center;"|29 March 1983 | style="text-align:center;"|{{age in years and days|1979|03|31|1983|03|29}} |- | 8 | [[Rainer Barzel]] (1924–2006) | style="text-align:center;"|[[Christian Democratic Union of Germany|CDU]] | style="text-align:center;"|29 March 1983 | style="text-align:center;"|25 October 1984{{efn|name="politres"}} | style="text-align:center;"|{{age in years and days|1983|03|29|1984|10|25}} |- | 9 | [[Philipp Jenninger]] (1932–2018) | style="text-align:center;"|[[Christian Democratic Union of Germany|CDU]] | style="text-align:center;"|5 November 1984 | style="text-align:center;"|11 November 1988{{efn|name="politres"}} | style="text-align:center;"|{{age in years and days|1984|11|05|1988|11|11}} |- | 10 | [[Rita Süssmuth]] (b. 1937) | style="text-align:center;"|[[Christian Democratic Union of Germany|CDU]] | style="text-align:center;"|25 November 1988 | style="text-align:center;"|26 October 1998 | style="text-align:center;"|{{age in years and days|1988|11|25|1998|10|26}} |- | style="background:#FFE8E8;" |11 | style="background:#FFE8E8;" |[[Wolfgang Thierse]] (b. 1943) | style="background:#ffe8e8; text-align:center;" |[[Social Democratic Party of Germany|SPD]] | style="background:#ffe8e8; text-align:center;" |26 October 1998 | style="background:#ffe8e8; text-align:center;" |18 October 2005 | style="background:#ffe8e8; text-align:center;"|{{age in years and days|1998|10|26|2005|10|18}} |- | 12 | [[Norbert Lammert]] (b. 1948) | style="text-align:center;"|[[Christian Democratic Union of Germany|CDU]] | style="text-align:center;"|18 October 2005 | style="text-align:center;"|24 October 2017 | style="text-align:center;"|{{age in years and days|2005|10|18|2017|10|24}} |- | 13 | [[Wolfgang Schäuble]] (1942–2023) | style="text-align:center;"|[[Christian Democratic Union of Germany|CDU]] | style="text-align:center;"|24 October 2017 | style="text-align:center;"|26 October 2021 | style="text-align:center;"|{{age in years and days|2017|10|24|2021|10|26}} |- |style="background:#FFE8E8;" |14 |style="background:#FFE8E8;" |[[Bärbel Bas]] (b. 1968) | style="background:#ffe8e8; text-align:center;"|[[Social Democratic Party of Germany|SPD]] | style="background:#ffe8e8; text-align:center;"|26 October 2021 | style="background:#ffe8e8; text-align:center;"|25 March 2025 | style="background:#ffe8e8; text-align:center;"|{{age in years and days|2021|10|26|2025|03|25}} |- | 15 | [[Julia Klöckner]] (b. 1972) | style="text-align:center;"|[[Christian Democratic Union of Germany|CDU]] | style="text-align:center;"|25 March 2025 | style="text-align:center;"|''present'' | style="text-align:center;"|{{age in years and days|2025|03|25}} |} == Membership == {{Main|Member of the German Bundestag}} ==Organization== [[File:Marie-Elisabeth-Lüders-Haus, Berlin-Mitte, 160328, ako.jpg|thumb|right|240px|The ''Marie-Elisabeth-Lüders-Haus'', one of the official buildings of the complex, housing the parliamentary library]] === Presidium and Council of Elders=== The executive bodies of the Bundestag are the [[Presidium of the Bundestag|Presidium]] and the [[Council of Elders of the Bundestag (Germany)|Council of Elders]]. The Presidium consists of the President, the presiding officer, and several Vice Presidents. The President and Vice Presidents are elected by the plenary of the Bundestag, whereby traditionally the largest fraction nominates the President and each fraction may nominate a vice president. In addition to the members of the Presidium, the Council of Elders includes 23 other deputies who are delegated proportionally by the factions. The council is the coordination hub, determining the daily legislative agenda and assigning committee chairpersons based on Parliamentary group representation. The council also serves as an important forum for interparty negotiations on specific legislation and procedural issues. The Presidium is responsible for the routine administration of the Bundestag, including its clerical and research activities. === Legislative calender === The Bundestag cannot be adjourned or prorogued during the current legislative session, but is always fully capable of acting and sets its own legislative calendar. Normally, the Bundestag sits for at least twenty weeks per year, interrupted by non-sessional weeks, especially a long parliamentary summer recess, during which the MPs are present in their constituencies. The course of a session week is traditionally always the same: meetings of the parliamentary faction's internal committees take place on Monday and Tuesday mornings, and meetings in the faction-plenary on Tuesday afternoon. From Wednesday to Friday, plenary sessions and committee meetings take place in parallel (this is the reason why often very few members are present at plenary debates). Committee meetings are interrupted on very important items on the agenda so that all MPs have the opportunity to be present in the plenary hall.<ref>https://www.bundestag.de/services/glossar/glossar/S/sitzungswochen-247330</ref> The highlights of the procedures include government statements by the Chancellor and the general debate at the beginning of the annual budget deliberations, during which there is a direct clash between the Chancellor and the opposition leader. Independently of the usual procedure, the Bundestag can also convene for extraordinary sessions at any time. This must happen if one third of the MPs, the President of Germany or the Chancellor request it (Basic Law, Article 39.3). ===Factions and groups=== {{Main|Fraktion (Bundestag)|Parliamentary group (Germany)}} The most important organisational structures within the Bundestag are 'factions' (''Fraktionen''; sing. ''Fraktion''). A parliamentary faction must consist of at least 5% of all members of parliament. Members of parliament from different parties may only join in a faction if those parties did not run against each other in any German state during the election. Normally, all parties that surpassed the 5%-threshold build a faction of their own. The [[Christian Democratic Union of Germany|CDU]] and [[Christian Social Union of Bavaria|CSU]] however, have always formed a joint faction, called [[CDU/CSU|CDU/CSU or Union]]. This is possible, as the CSU only runs in the state of [[Bavaria]] and the CDU only runs in the other 15 states. The size of a faction determines the extent of its representation on committees, the time slots allotted for speaking, the number of committee chairs it can hold, and its representation in executive bodies of the Bundestag. The factions, not the members, receive the bulk of government funding for legislative and administrative activities. The leadership of each fraction consists of a parliamentary party leader, several deputy leaders, and an executive committee. The leadership's major responsibilities are to represent the ''Fraktion'', enforce party discipline and orchestrate the party's parliamentary activities. The members of each ''Fraktion'' are distributed among [[working group]]s focused on specific policy-related topics such as social policy, economics, and foreign policy. The ''Fraktion'' meets every Tuesday afternoon in the weeks in which the Bundestag is in session to consider legislation before the Bundestag and formulate the party's position on it. Parties that do not hold 5% of the Bundestag-seats may be granted the status of a ''[[Parliamentary group (Germany)|group]]'' in the Bundestag; this is decided case by case, as the rules of procedure do not state a fixed number of seats for this. This status entails some privileges which are in general less than those of a faction. ===Committees=== Most of the legislative work in the Bundestag is the product of standing committees, which exist largely unchanged throughout one legislative period. The number of committees approximates the number of federal ministries, and the titles of each are roughly similar (e.g., defense, agriculture, and labor). There are, as of the current nineteenth Bundestag, 24 standing committees. The distribution of committee chairs and the membership of each committee reflect the relative strength of the various Parliamentary groups in the chamber. In the current nineteenth Bundestag, the [[CDU/CSU]] chaired ten committees, the [[Social Democratic Party of Germany|SPD]] five, the [[Alternative for Germany|AfD]] and the [[Free Democratic Party (Germany)|FDP]] three each, [[The Left (Germany)|The Left]] and the [[Alliance 90/The Greens|Greens]] two each. Members of the opposition party can chair a significant number of standing committees (e.g. the budget committee is by tradition chaired by the biggest opposition party). These committees have either a small staff or no staff at all. === Administration === The members of Bundestag and the presidium are supported by the Bundestag Administration. It is headed by the Director, that reports to the President of the Bundestag. The Bundestag Administrations four departments are Parliament Service, Research, Information / Documentation and Central Affairs. The Bundestag Administration employs around 3,000 employees. == Location == Also following the tradition of German [[Diet (assembly)|diets]], the German Bundestag can legally convene on any location, domestic and foreign. The Reichstag plenary chamber is not determined by law as the location of the assembly, making it a facility of convenience. Bundestag's predecessor, the [[Reichstag (Weimar Republic)|German Reichstag]], convened in the [[Kroll Opera House]] in Berlin, after the Reichstag with its then wooden interior and walls burned down in the [[Reichstag fire]]. After World War II, the Bundestag did not have own facilities to call home and had to convene in the [[Bundeshaus (Bonn)|Bundeshaus]] in Bonn together with the [[German Bundesrat|Bundesrat]]. 1953, the plenary chambers in the Bundeshaus had to be expanded and the Bundestag assembled in a radio building in Cologne. Until 1965, the Bundestag assembled in [[West Berlin]] for nine sessions. Seven sessions have been held in the [[Technische Universität Berlin]] and two sessions in Berlin's Congress Hall in [[Tiergarten (park)|Tiergarten]]. The assemblies met severe protest from the communist side, the last session even interrupted by [[Soviet Union|Soviet]] aircraft in supersonic low-altitude flight. 1971, the four occupying powers agree to not accept Bundestag assemblies in West Berlin anymore. The Bundestag assembled in the Old Waterworks Building in Bonn when the old plenary chamber had to get broken down, and in the new plenary chamber for only a few years after Germany's reunification. The most distinctive assembly of the Bundestag outsite its regular chambers was on 4 October 1990, the day after [[German reunification]]. The Bundestag assembled inside the Reichstag building in Berlin for the first time after 57 years, and remote from its then-regular home in Bonn. Soon after this most memorable assembly, the Bundestag decided to move [[Decision on the Capital of Germany|from Bonn back to Berlin]] by a law which sets only the city of Berlin to be the home of the Bundestag, not the building. ==See also== * [[German governing coalition]] * [[Parliamentwatch]] ==References== '''Informational notes''' {{notelist|refs= <!--{{efn|name=CDU/CSU|The Christian Democratic Union and the Christian Social Union of Bavaria do not compete against each other in the same states and form one group within the Bundestag.}} {{efn|name=SSW|As reflected by the [[electoral threshold in Germany]], parties are usually required to meet a threshold of at least 5% of nationwide votes or win at least 3 constituency seats; the SSW got a seat as a representative of a recognised minority group (in their case, Danes and Frisians), an exception enshrined into German electoral law.}} --> }} {{notelist}} '''Citations''' {{reflist}} ==External links== {{commons category}} * {{Official website}} * [http://www.election.de/ German election database] * [https://web.archive.org/web/20070928053901/http://www.bundeswahlleiter.de/bundestagswahl2005/downloads/Karte_Wahlkreise_16DBT_A1.pdf Map of constituencies] * [https://web.archive.org/web/20150928021725/http://direkte-demokratie.de/tabelle/weiter/demokratie-schaubild-detail.htm Distribution of power] * [https://web.archive.org/web/20160304054257/https://open.corsis.eu/ Plenary speech search engine] {{Germany topics}} {{National unicameral legislatures}} {{Parliaments in Europe}} {{Authority control}} {{coord|52|31|07|N|13|22|34|E|display=title|source:nlwiki}} [[Category:Bundestag| ]] [[Category:National legislatures|Germany]] [[Category:Parliaments by country|Germany]]
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