German Bundestag

Deutscher Bundestag
20th Bundestag
Coat of arms or logo
History
Established7 September 1949 (1949-09-07)
Preceded byReichstag (Nazi Germany, 1933–1945)
Leadership
Bärbel Bas, SPD
since 26 October 2021
Aydan Özoğuz, SPD
since 26 October 2021
Yvonne Magwas, CDU/CSU
since 26 October 2021
Wolfgang Kubicki, FDP
since 24 October 2017
Petra Pau, The Left
since 7 April 2006
Peter Ramsauer, CDU/CSU
since 27 December 2023
Olaf Scholz, SPD
since 8 December 2021
Friedrich Merz, CDU/CSU
since 15 February 2022
Structure
Seats736[1]
Political groups
Government (417)
  SPD (207)
  Greens (118)
  FDP (92)

Opposition (319)

  CDU/CSU (197)
  AfD (78)
  Non-attached (44)
Elections
Mixed-member proportional representation (MMP)
with leveling seats
Last election
26 September 2021
Next election
On or before 26 October 2025
Meeting place
Reichstag building
Mitte, Berlin, Germany
Website
www.bundestag.de/en
Rules
Rules of Procedure of the German Bundestag and Mediation Committee (English)

The Bundestag (German pronunciation: [ˈbʊndəstaːk] , "Federal Diet") is the German federal parliament. It is the only federal representative body that is directly elected by the German people, comparable to the House of Commons of the United Kingdom. The Bundestag was established by Title III[lower-alpha 3] of the Basic Law for the Federal Republic of Germany (German: Grundgesetz, pronounced [ˈɡʁʊntɡəˌzɛt͡s] ) in 1949 as one of the legislative bodies of Germany and thus it is the historical successor to the earlier 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 electorate.[lower-alpha 4] The minimum legal number of members of the Bundestag (German: Mitglieder des Bundestages) is 598;[lower-alpha 5] however, due to the system of overhang and leveling seats the current 20th Bundestag has a total of 736 members, making it the largest Bundestag to date and the largest freely elected national parliamentary chamber in the world.[2]

The Bundestag is elected every four years by German citizens[lower-alpha 6] aged 18 or over.[lower-alpha 7] Elections use a mixed-member proportional representation system which combines first-past-the-post elected seats with a proportional party list to ensure its composition mirrors the national popular vote. An early election is only possible in the cases outlined in Articles 63 and 68 of the Grundgesetz

The Bundestag has several functions. It is the chief legislative body on the federal level. The individual states (Bundesländer) of Germany participate in the legislative process through the Bundesrat, a separate assembly.[3] The Bundestag also elects and oversees the chancellor, Germany's head of government, and sets the government budget.

Since 1999, it has met in the Reichstag building in Berlin.[4] The Bundestag also operates in multiple new government buildings in Berlin and has its own police force (the Bundestagspolizei). The current president of the Bundestag since 2021 is Bärbel Bas of the SPD. The 20th Bundestag has five vice presidents and is the most visited parliament in the world.[5]

History

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.

With the dissolution of the German Confederation in 1866 and the founding of the German Empire (German Reich) in 1871, the Reichstag was established as the German parliament in Berlin, which was the capital of the then Kingdom of Prussia (the largest and most influential state in both the Confederation and the empire). Two decades later, the current parliament building was erected. The Reichstag delegates were elected by direct and equal male suffrage (and not the three-class electoral system prevailing in Prussia until 1918). The Reichstag did not participate in the appointment of the chancellor until the parliamentary reforms of October 1918. After the Revolution of November 1918 and the establishment of the Weimar Constitution, women were given the right to vote for (and serve in) the Reichstag, and the parliament could use the no-confidence vote to force the chancellor or any cabinet member to resign. 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 met only rarely, usually at the Kroll Opera House to unanimously rubber-stamp the decisions of the government. It last convened on 26 April 1942.

With the new constitution of 1949, the Bundestag was established as the new West German parliament. Because West Berlin was not officially under the jurisdiction of the constitution, a legacy of the Cold War, the Bundestag met in Bonn in several different buildings, including (provisionally) a former waterworks facility. 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[6] chosen by the House of Representatives, the city's legislature.[7]

The Bundeshaus in Bonn is the former parliament building of Germany. The sessions of the German Bundestag were held there from 1949 until its move to Berlin in 1999. Today it houses the International Congress Centre Bundeshaus Bonn and in the northern areas the branch office of the Bundesrat ("Federal Council"), which represents the Länder – the federated states. The southern areas became part of German offices for the United Nations in 2008.[8]

The former Reichstag building housed a history exhibition (Fragen an die deutsche Geschichte) and served occasionally as a conference center. The Reichstag building was also occasionally used as a venue for sittings of the Bundestag and its committees and the Federal Convention, the body which elects the German federal president. However, the Soviets harshly protested against the use of the Reichstag building by institutions of the Federal Republic of Germany and tried to disturb the sittings by flying supersonic jets close to the building.

Since 19 April 1999, the German parliament has again assembled in Berlin in its original Reichstag building, which was built in 1888 based on the plans of German architect Paul Wallot and underwent a significant renovation under the lead of British architect Lord Norman Foster. Parliamentary committees and subcommittees, public hearings and parliamentary group meetings take place in three auxiliary buildings, which surround the Reichstag building: the Jakob-Kaiser-Haus, Paul-Löbe-Haus and Marie-Elisabeth-Lüders-Haus.

In 2005, a small aircraft crashed close to the German Parliament. It was then decided to ban private air traffic over Central Berlin.[9]

Tasks

Together with the Bundesrat, the Bundestag is the legislative branch of the German political system.

Although most legislation is initiated by the executive branch, the Bundestag considers the legislative function its most important responsibility, concentrating much of its energy on assessing and amending the government's legislative program. The committees (see below) play a prominent role in this process. Plenary sessions provide a forum for members to engage in public debate on legislative issues before them, but they tend to be well attended only when significant legislation is being considered.

The Bundestag members are the only federal officials directly elected by the public; the Bundestag in turn elects the chancellor and, in addition, exercises oversight of the executive branch on issues of both substantive policy and routine administration. This check on executive power can be employed through binding legislation, public debates on government policy, investigations, and direct questioning of the chancellor or cabinet officials. For example, the Bundestag can conduct a question hour (Fragestunde), in which a government representative responds to a written question previously submitted by a member. Members can ask related questions during the question hour. The questions can concern anything from a major policy issue to a specific constituent's problem. Use of the question hour has increased markedly over the past forty years, with more than 20,000 questions being posed during the 1987–90 term. The opposition parties actively exercise their parliamentary right to scrutinize government actions.

Constituent services also take place via the Petition Committee. In 2004, the Petition Committee received over 18,000 complaints from citizens and was able to negotiate a mutually satisfactory solution to more than half of them. In 2005, as a pilot of the potential of internet petitions, a version of e-petitioner was produced for the Bundestag. This was a collaborative project involving The Scottish Parliament, International Teledemocracy Centre and the Bundestag 'Online Services Department'. The system was formally launched on 1 September 2005, and in 2008 the Bundestag moved to a new system based on its evaluation.[10]

Electoral term

The Bundestag within the political system of Germany

The Bundestag is elected for four years, and new elections must be held between 46 and 48 months after the beginning of its electoral term, unless the Bundestag is dissolved prematurely. Its term ends when the next Bundestag convenes, which must occur within 30 days of the election.[11] Prior to 1976, there could be a period where one Bundestag had been dissolved and the next Bundestag could not be convened; during this period, the rights of the Bundestag were exercised by a so-called "Permanent Committee".[12]

Election

Germany uses the mixed-member proportional representation system, a system of proportional representation combined with elements of first-past-the-post voting. The Bundestag has 598 nominal members, elected for a four-year term; these seats are distributed between the sixteen German states in proportion to the states' population eligible to vote.[13]

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 constituencies by first-past-the-post voting. The second votes are used to produce a proportional number of seats for parties, first in the states, and then on the federal level. Seats are allocated using the Sainte-Laguë method. If a party wins fewer constituency seats in a state than its second votes would entitle it to, it receives additional seats from the relevant state list. Parties can file lists in every single state under certain conditions – for example, a fixed number of supporting signatures. Parties can receive second votes only in those states in which they have filed a state list.[13]

If a party, by winning single-member constituencies in one state, receives more seats than it would be entitled to according to its second vote share in that state (so-called overhang seats), the other parties receive compensation seats. Owing to this provision, the Bundestag usually has more than 598 members. The 20th and current Bundestag, for example, has 736 seats: 598 regular seats and 138 overhang and compensation seats. Overhang seats are calculated at the state level, so many more seats are added to balance this out among the different states, adding more seats than would be needed to compensate for overhang at the national level in order to avoid negative vote weight.[13]

To qualify for seats based on the party-list vote share, a party must either win three single-member constituencies via first votes (basic mandate clause) or exceed a threshold of 5% of the second votes nationwide. If a party only wins one or two single-member constituencies and fails to get at least 5% of the second votes, it keeps the single-member seat(s), but other parties that accomplish at least one of the two threshold conditions receive compensation seats.[13] In the most recent example of this, during the 2002 election, the PDS won only 4.0% of the second votes nationwide, but won two constituencies in the state of Berlin.[14] The same applies if an independent candidate wins a single-member constituency,[13] which has not happened since the 1949 election.[14]

If a voter cast a first vote for a successful independent candidate or a successful candidate whose party failed to qualify for proportional representation, their second vote does not count toward proportional representation. However, it does count toward whether the elected party exceeds the 5% threshold.[13]

Parties representing recognized national minorities (currently Danes, Frisians, Sorbs, and Romani people) are exempt from both the 5% threshold and the basic mandate clause, but normally only run in state elections.[13] 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 and 2021.[15]

Bundestag ballot from the 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.

Latest election result

The latest federal election was held on Sunday, 26 September 2021, to elect the members of the 20th Bundestag.

Party Constituencies Party list Total
seats
+/–
Votes % Seats Votes % Seats
Social Democratic Party (SPD)12,234,69026.412111,955,43425.785206+53
Christian Democratic Union (CDU)[lower-alpha 8]10,451,52422.5988,775,47118.954152−48
Alliance 90/The Greens (GRÜNE)6,469,08114.0166,852,20614.8102118+51
Free Democratic Party (FDP)4,042,9518.705,319,95211.59292+12
Alternative for Germany (AfD)4,695,61110.1164,803,90210.36783−11
Christian Social Union (CSU)[lower-alpha 8]2,788,0486.0452,402,8275.2045−1
The Left (DIE LINKE)2,307,5365.032,270,9064.93639−30
Free Voters (FREIE WÄHLER)1,334,7392.901,127,7842.4000
Human Environment Animal Protection163,2010.40675,3531.5000
Grassroots Democratic Party (dieBasis)735,4511.60630,1531.400New
Die PARTEI543,1451.20461,5701.0000
Team Todenhöfer5,7000.00214,5350.500New
Pirate Party Germany (PIRATEN)60,8390.10169,9230.4000
Volt Germany (Volt)78,3390.20165,4740.400New
Ecological Democratic Party (ÖDP)152,7920.30112,3140.2000
National Democratic Party (NPD)1,0900.0064,5740.1000
South Schleswig Voters' Association (SSW)35,0270.1055,5780.11[lower-alpha 9]1+1
Party for Health Research2,8420.0049,3490.1000
The Humanists (Die Humanisten)12,7300.0047,7110.1000
Alliance C – Christians for Germany6,2220.0039,8680.1000
Bavaria Party (BP)36,7480.1032,7900.1000
V-Partei³10,6440.0031,8840.1000
Independents for Citizen-oriented Democracy13,4210.0022,7360.0000
The Greys (Die Grauen)2,3680.0019,4430.0000
The Urbans. A HipHop Party (du.)1,9120.0017,8110.0000
Marxist–Leninist Party (MLPD)22,5340.0017,7990.0000
German Communist Party (DKP)5,4460.0014,9250.0000
Animal Protection Alliance (Tierschutzallianz)7,3710.0013,6720.0000
European Party Love (LIEBE)8730.0012,9670.000New
Liberal Conservative Reformers (LKR)10,7670.0011,1590.000New
Lobbyists for Children (LfK)9,1890.000New
The III. Path (III. Weg)5150.007,8320.000New
Garden Party (MG)2,0950.007,6110.0000
Citizens' Movement (BÜRGERBEWEGUNG)1,5560.007,4910.000New
Democracy in Motion (DiB)2,6090.007,1840.0000
Human World (MENSCHLICHE WELT)6560.003,7860.0000
The Pinks/Alliance 21 (BÜNDNIS21)3770.003,4880.000New
Party of Progress (PdF)3,2280.000New
Socialist Equality Party (SGP)1,4170.0000
Civil Rights Movement Solidarity (BüSo)8110.007270.0000
Climate List Baden-Württemberg (KlimalisteBW)3,9670.000New
Family Party of Germany (FAMILIE)1,8170.0000
Democracy by Referendum (Volksabstimmung)1,0860.0000
Grey Panthers (Graue Panther)9610.000New
Thuringian Homeland Party (THP)5490.000New
The Others (sonstige)2560.000New
Bergpartei, die "ÜberPartei" (B*)2220.0000
Independents and voter groups110,8940.2000
Valid votes46,362,01398.946,442,02399.1
Invalid/blank votes492,4951.1412,4850.9
Total votes46,854,508100.029946,854,508100.0437736+27
Registered voters/turnout61,181,07276.661,181,07276.6
Source: Bundeswahlleiter

List of Bundestag by session

Seat distribution in the German Bundestag (at the beginning of each session)
Session Election Seats CDU/CSU SPD FDP Greens[lower-alpha 10] The Left[lower-alpha 11] AfD Others
Sonstige
1st1949 40213913152  80[lower-alpha 12]
2nd1953 48724315148  45[lower-alpha 13]
3rd1957 4972701694117[lower-alpha 14]
4th1961 49924219067
5th1965 49624520249
6th1969 49624222430
7th1972 49622523041
8th1976 49624321439
9th1980 49722621853
10th1983 4982441933427
11th1987 4972231864642
12th1990 66231923979817
13th1994 672294252474930
14th1998 669245298434736
15th2002 60324825147552
16th2005 614226222615154
17th2009 622239146936876
18th2013 6303111926364
19th2017 70924615380676994
20th2021 7361972069211839831[lower-alpha 15]
  Parties in the ruling coalition
Seat distribution in the Bundestag from 1949 to 2021
  Left
  SPD
  Green
  SSW
  FDP
  CDU
  CSU
  AfD

Parties that were only present between 1949 and 1957

  Others
  Centre
  DP
  GB/BHE
Timeline of the political parties who got elected into the Bundestag
1940s 1950s 1960s 1970s 1980s 1990s 2000s 2010s 2020s
9012 3456 7890 1234 5678 901 2345 6789 012 3456 789 0123 4567 8901 234 56789012 3456 78901
CSU
CDU
Centre
BP
BHE GB/BHE GDP DSU AfD
DP DP
FDP FVP
FDP FDP
WAV
SSW SSW
Greens Alliance 90/Greens
Greens/Alliance 90
SPD SPD
WASG The Left
KPD PDS
NDP DRP
DRP

Presidents since 1949

Presidents of the Bundestag
No. Name Party Beginning of term End of term Length of term
1 Erich Köhler (1892–1958) CDU 7 September 1949 18 October 1950[lower-alpha 16] 1 year, 41 days
2 Hermann Ehlers (1904–1954) CDU 19 October 1950 29 October 1954[lower-alpha 17] 4 years, 10 days
3 Eugen Gerstenmaier (1906–1986) CDU 16 November 1954 31 January 1969[lower-alpha 18] 14 years, 76 days
4 Kai-Uwe von Hassel (1913–1997) CDU 5 February 1969 13 December 1972 3 years, 312 days
5 Annemarie Renger[lower-alpha 19] (1919–2008) SPD 13 December 1972 14 December 1976 4 years, 1 day
6 Karl Carstens (1914–1992) CDU 14 December 1976 31 May 1979[lower-alpha 20] 2 years, 168 days
7 Richard Stücklen (1916–2002) CSU 31 May 1979 29 March 1983 3 years, 363 days
8 Rainer Barzel (1924–2006) CDU 29 March 1983 25 October 1984[lower-alpha 18] 1 year, 210 days
9 Philipp Jenninger (1932–2018) CDU 5 November 1984 11 November 1988[lower-alpha 18] 4 years, 6 days
10 Rita Süssmuth (b. 1937) CDU 25 November 1988 26 October 1998 9 years, 335 days
11 Wolfgang Thierse (b. 1943) SPD 26 October 1998 18 October 2005 6 years, 357 days
12 Norbert Lammert (b. 1948) CDU 18 October 2005 24 October 2017 12 years, 6 days
13 Wolfgang Schäuble (1942–2023) CDU 24 October 2017 26 October 2021 4 years, 2 days
14 Bärbel Bas (b. 1968) SPD 26 October 2021 present 2 years, 79 days

Membership

Organization

The Marie-Elisabeth-Lüders-Haus, one of the official buildings of the complex, housing the parliamentary library

Parliamentary groups

The most important organisational structures within the Bundestag are parliamentary groups (Fraktionen; sing. Fraktion). A parliamentary group must consist of at least 5% of all members of parliament. Members of parliament from different parties may only join in a group 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 parliamentary group. The CDU and CSU have always formed a single united Fraktion (CDU/CSU), which 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 party's Fraktion 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 Fraktionen, not the members, receive the bulk of government funding for legislative and administrative activities.

The leadership of each Fraktion 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 groups 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 Gruppe (literally "group", but a different status from Fraktion) in the Bundestag; this is decided case by case, as the rules of procedure do not state a fixed number of seats for this. Most recently, this applied to the Party of Democratic Socialism (PDS) from 1990 to 1998. This status entails some privileges which are in general less than those of a Fraktion.

Executive bodies

The Bundestag's executive bodies include the Council of Elders and the Presidium. The council consists of the Bundestag leadership, together with the most senior representatives of each Fraktion, with the number of these representatives tied to the strength of the Parliamentary groups in the chamber. 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. It consists of the chamber's president (usually elected from the largest Fraktion) and vice presidents (one from each Fraktion).

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 SPD five, the AfD and the FDP three each, The Left and the 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.

Principle of discontinuation

As is the case with some other parliaments, 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.

Any Bundestag (even after a snap election) is considered dissolved only once a newly elected Bundestag has actually gathered in order to constitute itself (Article 39 sec. 1 sentence 2 of the Basic Law), which has to happen within 30 days of its election (Article 39 sec. 2 of the Basic Law). Thus, it may happen (and has happened) that the old Bundestag gathers and makes decisions even after the election of a new Bundestag that has not gathered in order to constitute itself. For example, elections to the 16th Bundestag took place on 18 September 2005,[16] but the 15th Bundestag still convened after election day to make some decisions on German military engagement abroad,[17] and was entitled to do so, as the newly elected 16th Bundestag did not convene for the first time until 18 October 2005.[18]

See also

References

Informational notes

  1. 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.
  2. 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.
  3. Articles 38 to 49
  4. Article 38 Section 1 Grundgesetz
  5. Paragraph 1 Section 1 of the Federal Elections Act (Bundeswahlgesetz)
  6. German Citizens are defined in Article 116 Grundgesetz
  7. 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.
  8. 1 2 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.
  9. 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.
  10. 1983 to 1994 The Greens and 1990 to 1994 Alliance 90, since 1994 Alliance 90/The Greens
  11. 1990 to 2005 PDS (Party of Democratic Socialism), 2005 to 2007 The Left Party.PDS, since 2007 The Left
  12. DP 17, BP 17, KPD 15, WAV 12, Centre Party 10, DKP-DRP 5, SSW 1, Independents 3
  13. DP 15, GB/BHE 27, Centre Party 3
  14. DP
  15. SSW
  16. Resigned for medical reasons
  17. Died in office
  18. 1 2 3 Resigned for political reasons
  19. First woman to hold the post
  20. Elected President of Germany

    Citations

    1. "Sitzverteilung des 20. Deutschen Bundestages" (in German). Deutscher Bundestag. 30 May 2022. Retrieved 30 May 2022.
    2. "Das größte Parlament der Welt wächst und wächst: Politik bläht Bundestag immer weiter auf". FOCUS online. 14 July 2021. Archived from the original on 2 October 2022. Retrieved 17 August 2022.
    3. Grundgesetz für die Bundesrepublik Deutschland (PDF) (23 December 2014 ed.). Bonn: Parlamentarischer Rat. 8 May 1949. Archived (PDF) from the original on 9 October 2022. Retrieved 19 June 2016.
    4. "Plenarsaal "Deutscher Bundestag" – The Path of Democracy". www.wegderdemokratie.de. Retrieved 11 December 2019.
    5. "German Bundestag - From the Parliamentary Council to the most visited parliament..." German Bundestag. Retrieved 17 August 2022.
    6. Germany at the Polls: The Bundestag Elections of the 1980s, Karl H. Cerny, Duke University Press, 1990, page 34
    7. GERMANY (FEDERAL REPUBLIC OF) Date of Elections: 5 October 1980, International Parliamentary Union
    8. "The United Nations in Germany". Permanent Mission of the Federal Republic of Germany to the United Nations in New York. Retrieved 27 June 2021.
    9. "Small Plane Crashes Near German Parliament". amp.dw.com. Retrieved 29 December 2020.
    10. Trenel, M. (2007). "Öffentliche Petitionen beim deutschen Bundestag - erste Ergebnisse der Evaluation des Modellversuchs = An Evaluation Study of Public Petitions at the German Parliament" (PDF). TAB Brief Nr 32. Deutscher Bundestag. Archived from the original (PDF) on 16 March 2009. Retrieved 16 June 2009.
    11. "Basic Law, Article 39: Electoral term – Convening". Retrieved 29 September 2017.
    12. Schäfer, Friedrich (2013). Der Bundestag: Eine Darstellung seiner Aufgaben und seiner Arbeitsweise [The Bundestag: Its tasks and procedures] (in German). VS Verlag für Sozialwissenschaften. p. 28. ISBN 9783322836434.
    13. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Martin Fehndrich; Wilko Zicht; Matthias Cantow (22 September 2017). "Wahlsystem der Bundestagswahl". Wahlrecht.de. Retrieved 26 September 2017.
    14. 1 2 "Ergebnisse früherer Bundestagswahlen" (PDF). Der Bundeswahlleiter. 18 August 2017. Archived (PDF) from the original on 9 October 2022. Retrieved 26 September 2017.
    15. NDR (26 September 2021), Stefan Seidler (SSW): "Die ersten Zahlen sind sensationell" (in German), retrieved 27 September 2021
    16. "Verkürzte Fristen zur vorgezogenen Neuwahl des Deutschen Bundestages" (Press release). Bundeswahlleiter. 25 July 2005. Archived from the original on 7 October 2007. Retrieved 20 October 2008.
    17. "Stenographischer Bericht der 187. Sitzung des 15. Deutschen Bundestages am 28. September 2005" [Stenographic report of the 187th session of the 15th Deutscher Bundestag on 2005-09-28] (PDF). Deutscher Bundestag. 28 September 2005. Archived (PDF) from the original on 9 October 2022. Retrieved 20 October 2008.
    18. "Stenographischer Bericht der 1. Sitzung des 16. Deutschen Bundestages am 18. Oktober 2005" [Stenographic report of the 1st session of the 16th Deutscher Bundestag on 2005-10-18] (PDF). Deutscher Bundestag. 18 October 2005. Archived (PDF) from the original on 9 October 2022. Retrieved 20 October 2008.

    52°31′07″N 13°22′34″E / 52.51861°N 13.37611°E / 52.51861; 13.37611

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