1986 Lower Saxony state election explained

Election Name:1986 Lower Saxony state election
Country:Lower Saxony
Type:parliamentary
Ongoing:no
Previous Election:1982 Lower Saxony state election
Previous Year:1982
Next Election:1990 Lower Saxony state election
Next Year:1990
Seats For Election:All 155 seats in the Landtag of Lower Saxony
Majority Seats:78
Election Date:15 June 1986
Turnout:4,320,347 (77.3%)
0.4%
Leader1:Ernst Albrecht
Party1:Christian Democratic Union of Germany
Seats1:69
Seat Change1: 18
Popular Vote1:1,903,559
Percentage1:44.3%
Swing1: 6.4%
Leader2:Gerhard Schröder
Party2:Social Democratic Party of Germany
Seats2:66
Seat Change2: 3
Popular Vote2:1,807,157
Percentage2:42.1%
Swing2: 5.6%
Party4:Alliance 90/The Greens
Seats4:11
Seat Change4: 11
Popular Vote4:303,308
Percentage4:7.1%
Swing4: 0.6%
Party5:Free Democratic Party (Germany)
Seats5:9
Seat Change5: 1
Popular Vote5:257,873
Percentage5:6.0%
Swing5: 0.1%
Map Size:350px
Minister-President
Before Election:Ernst Albrecht
Before Party:Christian Democratic Union of Germany
After Election:Ernst Albrecht
After Party:Christian Democratic Union of Germany

The 1986 Lower Saxony state election was held on 15 June 1986 to elect the members of the 11th Landtag of Lower Saxony.[1] The election result was reportedly affected by the Chernobyl disaster which happened two weeks earlier.[2]

Background

In the, the Christian Democratic Union (CDU) under Minister-President of Lower Saxony Ernst Albrecht achieved its best result ever in Lower Saxony with 50.7 percent of the vote, while the Social Democratic Party (SPD) under Karl Ravens suffered heavy losses.[3]

Since this was already Ravens' second loss against Albrecht, he decided not to run as a candidate again in 1986.

When the SPD was looking for a candidate, the SPD leadership originally favoured former Federal Minister Anke Fuchs. However, after the former Federal Chairman of the Juso and then-Hanoverian MP Gerhard Schröder announced his candidacy and secured the support of several SPD district associations, Fuchs gave up being top candidate.

There were some disputes within the SPD over the coalition question: While chancellor candidate Johannes Rau had ruled out a coalition with the Greens for the federal election planned for January 1987 and was counting on the SPD having its own majority, Schröder did not want to rule out a red-green coalition in general.

The disputes between Rau and Schröder on this issue were one of the election campaign issues.

Parties and candidates

The state electoral committee approved 706 candidates (567 men and 139 women). The 623 district nominations consisted of 508 men and 115 women from 10 parties and individual candidates, the 389 state nominations consisted of 309 men and 80 women. Of these, 306 (56 women) also ran for a district nomination.

No.Party/individual candidateNumber of constituency candidates
1Christian Democratic Union of Germany100
2Social Democratic Party of Germany100
3DIE GRÜNEN100
4Free Democratic Party100
4100
5German Communist Party84
7The Whites32
81
91
10Young Voters Association of Lower Saxony1
11Independents4
total number of approved district election proposals623

Results

While the CDU lost its absolute majority, the SPD again exceeded the 40 percent mark thanks to significant gains. In addition, around a third of the CDU's direct mandates went to the SPD. The Greens and the FDP only recorded minimal gains. Even though there was renewed circulation of candidacies from the other parties and some new parties were eligible, the small parties again received less than one percent of the votes together. The DKP's votes also halved compared to the last election.

Formation of a government

The CDU formed a coalition with the FDP, which had a majority of one vote.  Albrecht was then confirmed as Minister President. Schröder resigned from his Bundestag mandate and moved into state politics as SPD parliamentary group leader and opposition leader.

See main article: Cabinet Albrecht V. In December 1988, a constructive vote of no confidence against Albrecht, brought by the SPD parliamentary group because of the casino affair, failed by 76 votes to 79. At least one member of the opposition parties SPD and Greens must have voted for Albrecht.

Further reading

External links

References

  1. Web site: Landtagswahl in Niedersachsen 1986 . 2024-10-18 . www.da-ra.de . en.
  2. News: June 17, 1986 . Chernobyl's political fallout . Washington Post.
  3. Web site: Former German politician, Ernst Albrecht, dies – DW – 12/13/2014 . 2024-10-18 . dw.com . en.