1958 North Rhine-Westphalia state election explained

Election Name:1958 North Rhine-Westphalia state election
Country:North Rhine-Westphalia
Type:parliamentary
Ongoing:no
Previous Election:1954 North Rhine-Westphalia state election
Previous Year:1954
Next Election:1962 North Rhine-Westphalia state election
Next Year:1962
Seats For Election:All 200 seats in the Landtag of North Rhine-Westphalia
Majority Seats:101
Election Date:6 July 1958
Turnout:8,046,198 (76.6% 3.9pp)
Candidate1:Karl Arnold
Party1:Christian Democratic Union of Germany
Last Election1:90 seats, 41.3%
Seats1:104
Seat Change1: 14
Popular Vote1:4,011,419
Percentage1:50.5%
Swing1: 9.2pp
Candidate2:Fritz Steinhoff
Party2:Social Democratic Party of Germany
Last Election2:76 seats, 34.5%
Seats2:81
Seat Change2: 5
Popular Vote2:3,115,738
Percentage2:39.2%
Swing2: 4.7pp
Candidate3:Willi Weyer
Party3:Free Democratic Party (Germany)
Seats3:15
Seat Change3: 10
Popular Vote3:566,258
Percentage3:7.1%
Swing3: 4.4pp
Map Size:400px
Government
Before Election:Steinhoff cabinet
Before Party:SPDFDPCentre
Posttitle:Government after election
After Election:First Meyers cabinet
After Party:CDU

The 1958 North Rhine-Westphalia state election was held on 6 July 1958 to elect the 4th Landtag of North Rhine-Westphalia. The outgoing government was a coalition of the Social Democratic Party (SPD), Free Democratic Party (FDP) and Centre Party led by Minister-President Fritz Steinhoff.

The result was a landslide victory for the opposition Christian Democratic Union (CDU), which won an absolute majority of both votes and seats on a swing of over nine percentage points. Despite its defeat, the SPD also improved its vote share to 39%. The main losses were felt by minor parties: the FDP fell to 7%, while the Centre Party collapsed to 1% and left the Landtag for good. Other parties which had fallen short of entering parliament in 1954, the KPD and BHE, no longer ran.

The CDU's lead candidate was former Minister-President Karl Arnold, who had served from 1947 until being removed by a motion of no confidence partway through the previous term in 1956. His government was replaced by a new SPD-led coalition. Arnold unexpectedly died just before the election on 29 June, leaving the CDU without an official leader. After the election, former interior minister Franz Meyers became Minister-President of the new CDU majority government.

Electoral system

The Landtag was elected via mixed-member proportional representation and had a term of four 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.

Background

In the previous election held on 27 June 1954, the CDU and SPD both saw swings to 41.3% and 34.5% respectively. The FDP remained steady on 11.5% while the Centre fell to 4% and only narrowly retained its seats thanks to a quirk of the electoral law. The KPD declined to 3.8% and lost representation. The outgoing CDU–Centre government lost its majority, and the CDU expanded the coalition to include the FDP.

In early 1956, the FDP withdrew from government due to efforts by the federal CDU government to introduce parallel voting. Together with the SPD, they passed a constructive motion of no confidence and elected SPD leader Fritz Steinhoff as Minister-President, replacing Karl Arnold. The new government had only a slim majority and thus the Centre was brought into cabinet, with Rudolf Amelunxen appointed justice minister. This coalition governed until the 1958 election.

Parties

NameIdeologyLead
candidate
1954 result
Votes (%)Seats
bgcolor= CDUChristian Democratic Union of Germany
Christian democracyKarl Arnold41.3%
bgcolor= SPDSocial Democratic Party of Germany
Social democracyFritz Steinhoff34.5%
bgcolor= FDPFree Democratic Party
Classical liberalismWilli Weyer11.5%
bgcolor= ZENTRUMCentre Party
Political CatholicismRudolf Amelunxen4.0%

External links