Election Name: | 1947 North Rhine-Westphalia state election |
Country: | North Rhine-Westphalia |
Type: | parliamentary |
Ongoing: | no |
Next Election: | 1950 North Rhine-Westphalia state election |
Next Year: | 1950 |
Seats For Election: | All 216 seats in the Landtag of North Rhine-Westphalia, including 16 overhang seats |
Majority Seats: | 109 |
Election Date: | 20 April 1947 |
Turnout: | 5,290,598 (67.3%) |
Candidate1: | Karl Arnold |
Party1: | Christian Democratic Union of Germany |
Seats1: | 92 |
Popular Vote1: | 1,889,581 |
Percentage1: | 37.6% |
Candidate2: | Fritz Henßler |
Party2: | Social Democratic Party of Germany |
Seats2: | 64 |
Popular Vote2: | 1,607,487 |
Percentage2: | 32.0% |
Candidate3: | Max Reimann |
Party3: | Communist Party of Germany |
Seats3: | 28 |
Popular Vote3: | 702,410 |
Percentage3: | 14.0% |
Candidate4: | Rudolf Amelunxen |
Party4: | Centre Party (Germany, 1945) |
Seats4: | 20 |
Popular Vote4: | 491,138 |
Percentage4: | 9.8% |
Candidate5: | Franz Blücher |
Party5: | Free Democratic Party (Germany) |
Seats5: | 12 |
Popular Vote5: | 298,995 |
Percentage5: | 6.0% |
Map Size: | 400px |
Government | |
Before Election: | Second Amelunxen cabinet |
Before Party: | CDU–SPD–KPD–Centre–FDP |
Posttitle: | Government after election |
After Election: | First Arnold cabinet |
After Party: | CDU–SPD–KPD–Centre |
The 1947 North Rhine-Westphalia state election was held on 20 April 1947 to elect the 1st Landtag of North Rhine-Westphalia. Prior to the election, the state was governed by a parliament appointed by British occupying authorities comprising 100 members from the Rhineland and 100 from Westphalia, and later four from Lippe. The outgoing government was an all-party coalition headed by Rudolf Amelunxen.
The Christian Democratic Union (CDU) emerged as the largest party with 37.6% and 92 seats, followed by the Social Democratic Party (SPD) with 32.0% and 64 seats. The Communist Party (KPD) placed fourth with 14%, followed by the Centre Party on 10% and Free Democratic Party (FDP) on 6%. The election did not take place in constituency 40 Kleve until 18 May; it was won by the CDU. Overall, the CDU won 16 overhang seats.
After the election, CDU leader Karl Arnold became Minister-President in a coalition of all parties except the FDP.
The Landtag was elected via mixed-member proportional representation and originally had a term of three years. 150 members were elected in single-member constituencies via first-past-the-post voting, and fifty then allocated using compensatory proportional representation. A single ballot was used for both. An electoral threshold of 5% of valid votes is applied to the Landtag; parties that fall below this threshold are ineligible to receive seats. Overhang seats were not compensated. Only parties and candidates approved by the occupying authorities were able to run, and candidates had to be over 25 years old. All citizens over 21 years, as well as those deprived of citizenship after 1933 for political reasons, were eligible to vote. Those with close association to the Nazi regime were barred from voting or running for election.[1]
Since the end of the Second World War, the areas comprising the former Prussian provinces of Westphalia and the northern part of the Rhine Province (the districts of Aachen, Cologne, and Düsseldorf) had been occupied by the United Kingdom. In August 1946, these areas were combined to form the state of North Rhine-Westphalia. In January 1947, the Free State of Lippe was also annexed to the new state.
A new parliament was appointed by British authorities comprising 100 representatives for the North Rhine and 100 for Westphalia, with an additional four added for Lippe after its annexation. The appointed parliament first met in October 1946. It was made up of members of five political parties: the Social Democratic Party (71 seats), Christian Democratic Union (66), Communist Party (34), Centre Party (18), and Free Democratic Party (9). The number of seats allocated to each party was based on the reckoning of the British authorities, and was revised at the end of November to reflect the results of the first local elections which were won by the CDU. The appointed parliament had very limited power, as governance was mostly regulated by the occupying authorities. It gained the power to pass its own laws at the start of December, but they still required approval from the British military governor, a restriction which remained until May 1949. The law regulating the election of the Landtag was passed in March.
Name | Ideology | Lead candidate | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
bgcolor= | CDU | Christian Democratic Union of Germany | Christian democracy | Karl Arnold | ||
bgcolor= | SPD | Social Democratic Party of Germany | Social democracy | Fritz Henßler | ||
bgcolor= | KPD | Communist Party of Germany | Communism | Max Reimann | ||
bgcolor= | ZENTRUM | Centre Party | Political Catholicism | Rudolf Amelunxen | ||
bgcolor= | FDP | Free Democratic Party | Classical liberalism | Franz Blücher |