Elections in Germany
Several articles in several parts of the Basic Law for the Federal Republic of Germany govern elections and establish constitutional requirements such as the secret ballot, and the requirement that all elections be conducted in a free and fair manner. The Basic Law also requires that the federal legislature enact detailed federal laws to govern elections; electoral law. One such article is Article 38, regarding the election of deputies in the federal Bundestag. Article 38.2 of the Basic Law establishes universal suffrage: "Any person who has attained the age of eighteen shall be entitled to vote; any person who has attained the age of majority shall be eligible for election."
German federal elections are for all members of the Bundestag, which in turn determines who is the chancellor of Germany. The most recent federal election was held on 23 February 2025.
Latest election
Result in history
1919 German federal election
November 1933 German parliamentary election
1949 West German federal election
1949 East German Constitutional Assembly election
German elections from 1871 to 1945
After the unification of Germany under Emperor Wilhelm I in 1871, elections were held to the German Reichstag or Imperial Assembly, which supplanted its namesake, the Reichstag of the North German Confederation. The Reichstag could be dissolved by the emperor or, after the abdication of Wilhelm II in 1918, the president of Germany. With the Weimar Republic's Constitution of 1919, the voting system changed from single-member constituencies to proportional representation. The election age was reduced from 25 to 20 years of age. Women's suffrage had already been established by a new electoral law in 1918 following the November Revolution of that year.Following the Nazi seizure of power in January 1933, another national election was held on 5 March. This was the last competitive election before World War II, although it was neither free nor fair. Violence and intimidation by the Sturmabteilung, Schutzstaffel and Der Stahlhelm had been underway for months against trade-unionists, communists, social democrats, and even centre-right Catholics. On 27 February, just prior to the election, the Reichstag Fire Decree suspended freedom of the press and most civil liberties. Mass arrests followed, including all Communist and several Social Democrat delegates to the Reichstag. 50000 members of the Hilfspolizei "monitored" polling places on election day to further intimidate voters. While the Nazi Party performed better than it had in the elections of November 1932, it still won only 33% of the vote. By placing their rivals in jail and intimidating others not to take their seats, the Nazis went from a plurality to the majority. Just two weeks after the election, the Enabling Act of 1933 effectively gave Hitler dictatorial power. Three more elections were held in Nazi Germany before the war. They all took the form of a one-question referendum, asking voters to approve a predetermined list of candidates composed exclusively of Nazis and nominally independent "guests" of the party.
Imperial elections
- 1848 German federal election
- 1871 German federal election
- 1874 German federal election
- 1877 German federal election
- 1878 German federal election
- 1881 German federal election
- 1884 German federal election
- 1887 German federal election
- 1890 German federal election
- 1893 German federal election
- 1898 German federal election
- 1903 German federal election
- 1907 German federal election
- 1912 German federal election
Weimar Republic federal elections
- 1919 German federal election
- 1920 German federal election
- May 1924 German federal election
- December 1924 German federal election
- 1928 German federal election
- 1930 German federal election
- July 1932 German federal election
- November 1932 German federal election
Weimar Republic presidential elections
- 1919 German presidential election
- 1925 German presidential election
- 1932 German presidential election
Elections in Nazi Germany
- March 1933 German federal election
- November 1933 German federal election
- 1936 German parliamentary election and referendum
- 1938 German parliamentary election and referendum
German elections since 1949
Federal Republic of Germany
Election system
Federal elections are conducted approximately every four years, resulting from the constitutional requirement for elections to be held 46 to 48 months after the assembly of the Bundestag. Elections can be held earlier in exceptional constitutional circumstances: for example, were the Chancellor to lose a vote of confidence in the Bundestag, then, during a grace period before the Bundestag can vote in a replacement Chancellor, the Chancellor could request the Federal President to dissolve the Bundestag and hold elections. Should the Bundestag be dismissed before the four-year period has ended, elections must be held within 100 days. The exact date of the election is chosen by the President and must be a Sunday or public holiday.German nationals over the age of 18 who have resided in Germany for at least three months are eligible to vote. Eligibility for candidacy is essentially the same.
The federal legislature in Germany has a one chamber parliament—the Bundestag ; the Bundesrat represents the States and is not considered a chamber as its members are not elected. The Bundestag is elected using a mixed member proportional system. The Bundestag has 598 nominal members, elected for a four-year term. Half, 299 members, are elected in single-member constituencies by first-past-the-post voting, while a further 299 members are allocated from party lists to achieve a proportional distribution in the legislature, conducted according to a form of proportional representation called the Mixed member proportional representation system. Voters vote once for a constituency representative, and a second time for a party, and the lists are used to make the party balances match the distribution of second votes. Overhang seats may add to the nominal number of 598 members: for example, in the 2009 federal election there were 24 overhang seats, giving a total of 622 seats. This is caused by larger parties winning additional single-member constituencies above the totals determined by their proportional party vote.
Germany has a multi-party system with two historically strong political parties and some other third parties also represented in the Bundestag. Since 1990, and including the results of the most recent federal election in 2021, just six main political parties have managed to secure representation in the Bundestag.
In 2008, some modifications to the electoral system were required under an order of the Federal Constitutional Court. The court had found that a provision in the Federal Election Law made it possible for a party to experience a negative vote weight, thus losing seats due to more votes, and found that this violated the constitutional guarantee of the electoral system being equal and direct.
The court allowed three years to amend the law. Accordingly, the 2009 federal election was allowed to proceed under the previous system. The changes were due by 30 June 2011, but appropriate legislation was not completed by that deadline. A new electoral law was enacted in late 2011, but declared unconstitutional once again by the Federal Constitutional Court upon lawsuits from the opposition parties and a group of some 4,000 private citizens.
Finally, four of the five factions in the Bundestag agreed on an electoral reform whereby the number of seats in the Bundestag will be increased as much as necessary to ensure that any overhang seats are compensated through apportioned leveling seats, to ensure full proportionality according to the political party's share of party votes at the national level. The Bundestag approved and enacted the new electoral reform in February 2013.
List of federal election results
- 1949 West German federal election
- 1953 West German federal election
- 1957 West German federal election
- 1961 West German federal election
- 1965 West German federal election
- 1969 West German federal election
- 1972 West German federal election
- 1976 West German federal election
- 1980 West German federal election
- 1983 West German federal election
- 1987 West German federal election
- 1990 German federal election
- 1994 German federal election
- 1998 German federal election
- 2002 German federal election
- 2005 German federal election
- 2009 German federal election
- 2013 German federal election
- 2017 German federal election
- 2021 German federal election
- 2025 German federal election
European elections
- 1979 European Parliament election in West Germany
- 1984 European Parliament election in West Germany
- 1989 European Parliament election in West Germany
- 1994 European Parliament election in Germany
- 1999 European Parliament election in Germany
- 2004 European Parliament election in Germany
- 2009 European Parliament election in Germany
- 2014 European Parliament election in Germany
- 2019 European Parliament election in Germany
- 2024 European Parliament election in Germany
Presidential elections
- 1949 West German presidential election
- 1954 West German presidential election
- 1959 West German presidential election
- 1964 West German presidential election
- 1969 West German presidential election
- 1974 West German presidential election
- 1979 West German presidential election
- 1984 West German presidential election
- 1989 West German presidential election
- 1994 German presidential election
- 1999 German presidential election
- 2004 German presidential election
- 2009 German presidential election
- 2010 German presidential election
- 2012 German presidential election
- 2017 German presidential election
- 2022 German presidential election