2012 Schleswig-Holstein state election explained

Election Name:2012 Schleswig-Holstein state election
Country:Schleswig-Holstein
Type:parliamentary
Ongoing:no
Previous Election:2009 Schleswig-Holstein state election
Previous Year:2009
Next Election:2017 Schleswig-Holstein state election
Next Year:2017
Seats For Election:All 69 seats in the Landtag of Schleswig-Holstein
Majority Seats:35
Election Date:6 May 2012
Turnout:1,328,452 (60.2%)
13.4%
Leader1:Jost de Jager
Party1:Christian Democratic Union of Germany
Last Election1:34 seats, 31.5%
Seats1:22
Seat Change1: 12
Popular Vote1:408,637
Percentage1:30.8%
Swing1: 0.7%
Leader2:Torsten Albig
Party2:Social Democratic Party of Germany
Last Election2:25 seats, 25.4%
Seats2:22
Seat Change2: 3
Popular Vote2:404,048
Percentage2:30.4%
Swing2: 5.0%
Leader3:Robert Habeck
Party3:Alliance 90/The Greens
Last Election3:12 seats, 12.4%
Seats3:10
Seat Change3: 2
Popular Vote3:174,953
Percentage3:13.2%
Swing3: 0.8%
Leader4:Wolfgang Kubicki
Party4:Free Democratic Party (Germany)
Last Election4:14 seats, 14.9%
Seats4:6
Seat Change4: 8
Popular Vote4:108,953
Percentage4:8.2%
Swing4: 6.7%
Leader5:Torge Schmidt
Party5:Pirate Party Germany
Last Election5:0 seats, 1.8%
Seats5:6
Seat Change5: 6
Popular Vote5:108,902
Percentage5:8.2%
Swing5: 6.4%
Leader6:Anke Spoorendonk
Party6:South Schleswig Voter Federation
Last Election6:4 seats, 4.3%
Seats6:3
Seat Change6: 1
Popular Vote6:61,025
Percentage6:4.6%
Swing6: 0.3%
Map Size:350px
Minister-President
Before Election:Peter Harry Carstensen
Before Party:Christian Democratic Union of Germany
After Election:Torsten Albig
After Party:Social Democratic Party of Germany

The 2012 Schleswig-Holstein state election was held on 6 May 2012 to elect the members of the Landtag of Schleswig-Holstein.[1] The incumbent coalition government of the Christian Democratic Union and Free Democratic Party (FDP) was defeated.[2] Though the CDU remained the largest party, the Social Democratic Party (SPD) negotiated a coalition with The Greens and the South Schleswig Voters' Association (SSW). This was dubbed the "Danish traffic light" or "Namibia coalition". SPD leader Torsten Albig was subsequently elected Minister-President by the Landtag.

Background

After the 2009 state election, the CDU formed a coalition with the FDP under Minister-President Peter Harry Carstensen. Due to ambiguity and complications with the electoral law, the election result was the subject of a legal challenge by the Greens, SSW, and The Left. In August 2010, the state Constitutional Court ruled that the electoral law was unconstitutional. The court mandated that a new electoral law be legislated within six months and that new elections be held by September 2012, two years ahead of schedule.

Minister-President Carstensen had stated his intention to retire at the next election. The CDU therefore needed to pick a candidate to succeed him as Minister-President if they won the election. At a party conference in May 2011, they chose Christian von Boetticher, incumbent deputy Minister-President and leader of the CDU parliamentary group. In August, however, von Boetticher resigned these positions after it was revealed that he had been involved in an intimate relationship with a 16-year-old girl as recently as 2010. Two days later, the CDU announced that Minister of Science, Economic Affairs and Transport Jost de Jager had been nominated as their new candidate for Minister-President.

Parties

The table below lists parties represented in the previous Landtag of Schleswig-Holstein.

NameIdeologyLeader(s)2009 result
Votes (%)Seats
bgcolor= CDUChristian Democratic Union of Germany
Christian democracyJost de Jager31.5%
bgcolor= SPDSocial Democratic Party of Germany
Social democracyTorsten Albig25.4%
bgcolor= FDPFree Democratic Party
Classical liberalismWolfgang Kubicki14.9%
bgcolor= GrüneAlliance 90/The Greens
Green politicsRobert Habeck12.4%
bgcolor= LinkeThe Left
Democratic socialismAntje Jansen6.0%
bgcolor= SSWSouth Schleswig Voters' Association
Danish and Frisian minority interestsAnke Spoorendonk4.3%

Opinion polling

Party polling

Polling firmFieldwork dateSample
size
CDUSPDFDPGrüneLinkeSSWPiratenOthersLead
2012 state electiondata-sort-value="2012-05-06"6 May 201230.830.48.213.22.34.68.22.40.4
GMSdata-sort-value="2012-05-02"28 Apr–1 May 20121,002323361224831
Infratest dimapdata-sort-value="2012-04-26"24–26 Apr 20121,00130326132.54.5932
Forschungsgruppe Wahlendata-sort-value="2012-04-27"23–26 Apr 20121,0033131712.52.5493data-sort-value="0"Tie
Infratest dimapdata-sort-value="2012-04-19"12–17 Apr 20121,0003132513241031
Infratest dimapdata-sort-value="2012-04-12"10–11 Apr 20121,000323241234112data-sort-value="0"Tie
Infratest dimapdata-sort-value="2012-03-29"22–27 Mar 20121,000343241544522
dimapdata-sort-value="2012-03-16"9–13 Mar 20121,0033433415345?1
Forsadata-sort-value="2012-03-05"March 2012?3535213345?data-sort-value="0"Tie
Infratest dimapdata-sort-value="2012-02-17"13–16 Feb 20121,00033333163354data-sort-value="0"Tie
Emniddata-sort-value="2012-01-20"17–19 Jan 20121,000343241533722
Forsadata-sort-value="2011-11-18"15–17 Nov 20111,002333231733631
Infratest dimapdata-sort-value="2011-09-28"26–27 Sep 20111,000303432123434
Forsadata-sort-value="2011-08-17"15 Aug 201175230324194472
Infratest dimapdata-sort-value="2011-05-17"13–16 May 20111,000333142224132
Forsadata-sort-value="2010-09-02"31 Aug–1 Sep 20107513131718553data-sort-value="0"Tie
Infratest dimapdata-sort-value="2010-09-01"30–31 Aug 20101,0013232519444data-sort-value="0"Tie
IfM Leipzigdata-sort-value="2010-04-03"29–31 Mar 2010823312212206459
2009 state electiondata-sort-value="2009-09-27"27 September 200931.525.414.912.46.04.31.83.66.1

Minister-President polling

Polling firmFieldwork dateLead

CDU

SPD
Forschungsgruppe Wahlendata-sort-value="2012-04-27"27 Apr 2012294415
Infratest dimapdata-sort-value="2012-04-26"26 Apr 2012274922
Infratest dimapdata-sort-value="2012-04-19"19 Apr 2012325624
Infratest dimapdata-sort-value="2012-04-12"12 Apr 2012315322
Infratest dimapdata-sort-value="2012-03-29"29 Mar 2012334926
Infratest dimapdata-sort-value="2012-02-17"17 Feb 2012294516
Infratest dimapdata-sort-value="2011-09-28"28 Sep 2011274518
Forsadata-sort-value="2011-08-17"17 Aug 201130344

Election result

The SPD recovered some of the voteshare it had lost in the 2009 election while the CDU stagnated. This led to a very close result, with both parties winning 22 seats, but the CDU leading with 30.8% of the vote to the SPD's 30.4%. On paper, the FDP was the biggest loser of the election, almost halving its voteshare from its impressive showing in 2009. However, compared to the national trend, the Schleswig-Holstein result was an unexpected success; and until April, state polling had predicted that the FDP would lose all its seats. The Greens marginally improved their performance compared to 2009. The Left fared poorly, losing all its seats after only 3 years in the Landtag. The Pirate Party won 8.2%, entering the Landtag for the first time. This came after successes in the 2011 Berlin state election and 2012 Saarland state election in the preceding months. The SSW achieved its best result since 1950 with 4.6%.|-| colspan=8| |-! colspan="2" | Party! Votes! %! +/-! Seats ! +/-! Seats %|-| bgcolor=| | align=left | Christian Democratic Union (CDU)| align=right| 408,637| align=right| 30.8| align=right| 0.7| align=right| 22| align=right| 12| align=right| 31.9|-| bgcolor=| | align=left | Social Democratic Party (SPD)| align=right| 404,048| align=right| 30.4| align=right| 5.0| align=right| 22| align=right| 3| align=right| 31.9|-| bgcolor=| | align=left | Alliance 90/The Greens (Grüne)| align=right| 174,953| align=right| 13.2| align=right| 0.8| align=right| 10| align=right| 2| align=right| 14.5|-| bgcolor=| | align=left | Free Democratic Party (FDP)| align=right| 108,953| align=right| 8.2| align=right| 6.7| align=right| 6| align=right| 8| align=right| 8.7|-| bgcolor=| | align=left | Pirate Party Germany (Piraten)| align=right| 108,902| align=right| 8.2| align=right| 6.4| align=right| 6| align=right| 6| align=right| 8.7|-| bgcolor=| | align=left | South Schleswig Voters' Association (SSW)| align=right| 61,025| align=right| 4.6| align=right| 0.3| align=right| 3| align=right| 1| align=right| 4.3|-! colspan=8||-| bgcolor=| | align=left | The Left (Linke)| align=right| 29,900| align=right| 2.3| align=right| 3.7| align=right| 0| align=right| 6| align=right| 0|-| bgcolor=| | align=left | Family Party (Familie)| align=right| 12,758| align=right| 1.0| align=right| 0.2| align=right| 0| align=right| ±0| align=right| 0|-| bgcolor=|| align=left | Others| align=right| 19,276| align=right| 1.5| align=right| | align=right| 0| align=right| ±0| align=right| 0|-! align=right colspan=2| Total! align=right| 1,328,452! align=right| 100.0! align=right| ! align=right| 69! align=right| 26! align=right| |-! align=right colspan=2| Voter turnout! align=right| ! align=right| 60.2! align=right| 13.4! align=right| ! align=right| ! align=right| |}

Outcome

The outgoing CDU–FDP government lost its majority, winning just 28 of the 35 seats needed for a majority. The SPD–Green bloc also fell short with 32 seats. CDU candidate Jost de Jager invited both the FDP and Greens to discuss a potential coalition, but neither party accepted. The SPD, Greens, and SSW began discussions for forming a government together. This was dubbed the "Danish traffic light", a play on the red-yellow-green "traffic light coalition", with the "yellow" FDP substituted for the "Danish" SSW. It would have a narrow, one-seat majority. This same arrangement had been attempted after the 2005 state election, but unexpectedly failed when one of the government members abstained. Pirate Party leader Torge Schmidt suggested that his party could lend their support to the Danish traffic light, though this never came to fruition.

Coalition talks succeeded, and the Landtag voted to confirm Torsten Albig as the new Minister-President. The government received 37 votes, meaning that at least two opposition members voted in favour.

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Landtagswahl 2012 . German . Schleswig-Holstein.de . 12 January 2012 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20120102131801/http://www.schleswig-holstein.de/LWL/DE/Landtagswahl/Landtagswahl_node.html . 2 January 2012 .
  2. News: Close race in German state elections with center-right poised to lose majority . . . 6 May 2012 . 7 May 2012.