2024 Thuringian state election explained

Election Name:2024 Thuringian state election
Country:Thuringia
Type:parliamentary
Ongoing:no
Previous Election:2019 Thuringian state election
Previous Year:2019
Seats For Election:All 88 seats in the Landtag of Thuringia
Majority Seats:45
Election Date:1 September 2024
Turnout:1,218,190 (73.6%)
8.7 pp
Leader1:Björn Höcke
Party1:Alternative for Germany
Last Election1:22 seats, 23.4%
Seats1:32
Seat Change1: 10
Popular Vote1:396,704
Percentage1:32.8%
Swing1: 9.4 pp
Leader2:Mario Voigt
Party2:Christian Democratic Union of Germany
Last Election2:21 seats, 21.7%
Seats2:23
Seat Change2: 2
Popular Vote2:285,141
Percentage2:23.6%
Swing2: 1.9 pp
Leader3:Katja Wolf
Party3:Bündnis Sahra Wagenknecht
Last Election3:Did not exist
Seats3:15
Seat Change3: 15
Popular Vote3:190,448
Percentage3:15.8%
Swing3:New party
Leader4:Bodo Ramelow
Party4:The Left (Germany)
Last Election4:29 seats, 31.0%
Seats4:12
Seat Change4: 17
Popular Vote4:157,641
Percentage4:13.1%
Swing4: 17.9 pp
Leader5:Georg Maier
Party5:Social Democratic Party of Germany
Last Election5:8 seats, 8.2%
Seats5:6
Seat Change5: 2
Popular Vote5:73,088
Percentage5:6.1%
Swing5: 2.1 pp
Leader6:Madeleine Henfling
Party6:Alliance 90/The Greens
Last Election6:5 seats, 5.2%
Seats6:0
Seat Change6: 5
Popular Vote6:38,289
Percentage6:3.2%
Swing6: 2.0 pp
Leader7:Thomas Kemmerich
Party7:Free Democratic Party (Germany)
Last Election7:5 seats, 5.0%
Seats7:0
Seat Change7: 5
Popular Vote7:13,582
Percentage7:1.1%
Swing7: 3.9 pp
Map Size:350px
Government
Before Election:Second Ramelow cabinet
Before Party:LeftSPD–Green
Posttitle:Government after election

The 2024 Thuringian state election was held on 1 September 2024 to elect the members of the 8th Landtag of Thuringia.[1] It was held on the same day as the 2024 Saxony state election.[2]

The outgoing government was a minority government consisting of The Left, the Social Democratic Party (SPD), and The Greens, led by Minister-President Bodo Ramelow of The Left.

The Alternative for Germany (AfD) became the largest party with 33% of the vote, its best ever performance and the first time it placed first in a state election in Germany. The incumbent governing coalition suffered dramatic losses; the Left lost more than half its support and fell to fourth place on 13%, while the SPD recorded its worst result in any postwar state election. The Greens and the Free Democratic Party lost all of their seats. The Christian Democratic Union (CDU) recorded small gains and came second with 24%. The newly-founded Sahra Wagenknecht Alliance (BSW) debuted in third place at 16%.[3]

The AfD became the first far-right party in Germany since the Nazi Party to win a plurality of seats in a state election.[4] [5] [6] [7] [8]

Election date

According to § 18 of the Thuringian Electoral Law for the Landtag,[9] the Landtag election must take place on a Sunday or public holiday at the earliest 57 months after the beginning of the current parliamentary term on 5 February 2020 and at the latest 61 months after, i.e. at the earliest in August 2024 and at the latest December 2024.[10]

According to the Thuringian Constitution, an early election may be held if, at the request of one-third of its members, the Landtag votes with a two-thirds majority to dissolve itself. This may also occur if the Landtag does not vote confidence in a Minister-President within three weeks of a failed vote of confidence in the incumbent. The motion to dissolve the Landtag may only be voted on between eleven and thirty days after its submission. If passed, the election must then take place within 70 days.

Proposed early election

In the aftermath of the 2020 Thuringian government crisis, The Left, CDU, SPD, and Greens came to an agreement to dissolve the Landtag and schedule a new election for 25 April 2021. At the time the four parties held a combined 63 of the 90 seats, two more than the 61 votes required for a dissolution.[11] That January, the four parties agreed to postpone the election to 26 September 2021, the same date as the upcoming federal election.[12]

The vote to dissolve the Landtag was scheduled for 19 July 2021. However, the motion was withdrawn on 16 July after four CDU and two Left members informed party leaders they would vote against it, leaving it clearly short of the required majority. Left parliamentary leader Stefan Dittes announced there would not be another effort to dissolve the Landtag, and the red-red-green minority government continued for a full term.[13] [14]

Background

Previous election

See main article: 2019 Thuringian state election. In the previous state election held on 27 October 2019, The Left became the largest party for the first time in any German state, winning 31.0% of votes cast. The Alternative for Germany (AfD) made the largest gains, increasing its vote share by almost 13 percentage points and became the second largest party with 23.4%. The Christian Democratic Union (CDU), which had previously been the largest party in the Landtag, lost almost 12 points and fell to third place with 21.7%. The Social Democratic Party (SPD) placed fourth on 8.2%. The Greens narrowly retained their position in the legislature, winning 5.2% of votes. The Free Democratic (FDP) entered the Landtag for the first time since 2009, exceeding the 5% electoral threshold by just 73 votes.[15]

Incumbent Minister President Bodo Ramelow of The Left had led a coalition government of The Left, SPD, and Greens since 2014. The Left's gains were offset by losses for the SPD and Greens, and the coalition lost its majority.

Government crisis

See main article: article and 2020 Thuringian government crisis.

The loss of a majority for the Ramelow's red-red-green coalition led to an unclear path to a new government. The state constitution provides that a Minister-President is elected with a plurality of votes if two rounds of balloting fails to produce a majority, allowing the coalition to potentially continue as a minority government. Unexpectedly, the FDP leader Thomas Kemmerich was elected as Minister-President on this third ballot, with 45 votes to Ramelow's 44. Kemmerich was elected with the support of the FDP, CDU, and controversially, the AfD. This was the first time AfD had been involved in the election of a head of state government in Germany. The apparent cooperation of the three parties was viewed by some as breaking the cordon sanitaire around AfD which had been in place since its formation, in which all other parties sought to deny AfD government or political influence, refusing to negotiate or work with them on any level. This sparked major controversy nationwide, with many politicians expressing their outrage, including federal Chancellor and former CDU leader Angela Merkel, who described it as "unforgivable" and condemned her party's involvement.[16] [17] Kemmerich announced his resignation on 6 February, just a day after taking office. He remained in office in an interim capacity.[18] In the re-ran vote a month later, Ramelow was re-elected Minister-President.[19]

Parties and lists

Party2019 result
candidates
List
candidates
Lead candidate
bgcolor=The Left (LINKE)31.0%4450Bodo Ramelow
bgcolor=Alternative for Germany (AfD)23.4%4244Björn Höcke
bgcolor=Christian Democratic Union (CDU)21.7%4487Mario Voigt
bgcolor=Social Democratic Party (SPD)8.2%4247Georg Maier
bgcolor=Alliance 90/The Greens (GRÜNE)5.2%2019Madeleine Henfling
bgcolor=Free Democratic Party (FDP)5.0%3339Thomas Kemmerich
bgcolor=Action Party for Animal Welfare (Tierschutz hier)1.1%3Daniel Riedel
bgcolor=Ecological Democratic Party (ÖDP)0.4%313Martin Truckenbrodt
bgcolor=Pirate Party Germany (PIRATEN)0.4%19Heidrun Jänchen
bgcolor=Marxist–Leninist Party (MLPD)0.3%313Tassilo Timm
bgcolor=Bündnis Sahra Wagenknecht (BSW)632Katja Wolf
bgcolor=Free Voters (FW)2215Andreas Hummel
bgcolor=Values Union (WU)428Albert Weiler
bgcolor=Alliance Germany (BD)15Steffi Brönner
bgcolor=Family Party (FAMILIE)13Sven Seyfarth
Other6

Campaign

Lead candidates

On 15 June 2020, the SPD elected Georg Maier as state chairman and lead candidate for the planned 2021 election. This came after previous leader Wolfgang Tiefensee resigned his position.[20]

In September 2020, former Federal Commissioner for the New States Christian Hirte was elected as state CDU chairman, succeeding Mike Mohring, who had resigned during the government crisis in February.[21] On 17 November, the state executive nominated parliamentary group leader Mario Voigt as their preferred lead candidate.[22]

After extended pressure from the federal FDP as well as other state branches, Thomas Kemmerich announced on 11 December that he was ineligible as his party's lead candidate in the planned 2021 election.[23]

Opinion polls

Party polling

Polling firmFieldwork dateSample
size
LinkeAfDCDUSPDGrüneFDPBSWOthersLead
2024 state electiondata-sort-value="2024-09-01"1 Sep 202413.132.823.66.13.21.115.84.39.2
Wahlkreisprognose900143122.552.517.57.58.5
Forsa1,005143022741768
Forschungsgruppe Wahlen1,859132923641876
INSA1,0001430216332039
Forschungsgruppe Wahlen1,071143021641769
Infratest dimap1,551133023731777
Forsa1,011133021741879
INSA1,0001630216331929
Wahlkreisprognose1.00015.527.5234.52.52.5195.54.5
Forschungsgruppe Wahlen1,015153021731959
INSA1,0001429227422027
Infratest dimap1,172112823742165
European Parliament election5.730.723.28.24.22.015.011.07.5
INSA1,00016302075215410
Infratest dimap1,182162920951569
INSA1,00018312165213410
INSA1,00015312065317311
Forsa1,2531736209534616
Wahlkreisprognose98720.527.512.562.5322.55.55
2736.5167346.59.5
INSA1,000203422944712
INSA1,0002232211064510
INSA1,0002232201054710
1822169532523
Infratest dimap1,1932034211054613
Wahlkreisprognose904253017.510467.55
INSAdata-sort-value="2023-04-24"17–24 Apr 20231,000222821116576
INSAdata-sort-value="2023-01-27"20–27 Jan 20231,000252622106561
Wahlkreisprognosedata-sort-value="2022-12-11"5–11 Dec 20221,016273015105673
INSAdata-sort-value="2022-11-08"1–8 Nov 20221,108232521117582
Wahlkreisprognosedata-sort-value="2022-10-31"25–31 Oct 20221,008242817.512666.54
INSAdata-sort-value="2022-09-15"7–15 Sep 20221,081232620118573
Wahlkreisprognosedata-sort-value="2022-09-06"29 Aug–6 Sep 20221,000222820.5115.5586
Infratest dimapdata-sort-value="2022-08-02"28 Jul–2 Aug 20221,172222522117583
INSAdata-sort-value="2022-07-11"4–11 Jul 20221,01924242013856Tie
Wahlkreisprognosedata-sort-value="2022-06-15"7–15 Jun 20221,031242616147582
Wahlkreisprognosedata-sort-value="2022-05-30"23–30 May 20221,000242318167481
Wahlkreisprognosedata-sort-value="2022-04-14"6–14 Apr 2022994202119205871
INSAdata-sort-value="2022-04-11"4–11 Apr 20221,027242220167562
INSAdata-sort-value="2022-03-01"1 Mar 20221,000252319166652
Infratest dimapdata-sort-value="2022-02-22"17–22 Feb 20221,158232419155771
INSAdata-sort-value="2021-12-02"24–30 Nov 20211,000242315187761
INSAdata-sort-value="2021-10-04"29 Sep–4 Oct 20211,074202415217853
2021 federal electiondata-sort-value="2021-09-26"26 Sep 202111.424.016.923.46.69.08.70.6
Infratest dimapdata-sort-value="2021-07-27"20–23 Jul 20211,162272221116675
INSAdata-sort-value="2021-07-16"9–15 Jul 20211,00627222197865
Wahlkreisprognosedata-sort-value="2021-06-24"17–24 Jun 202128222110.56.5756
INSAdata-sort-value="2021-06-17"7–14 Jun 20211,00626232296773
Wahlkreisprognosedata-sort-value="2021-05-18"18 May 202126231610.510.5863
INSAdata-sort-value="2021-03-18"8–16 Mar 20211,03630231998657
Infratest dimapdata-sort-value="2021-03-02"25 Feb–1 Mar 20211,000292322105666
INSAdata-sort-value="2021-02-04"27 Jan–2 Feb 20211,00031232278638
Wahlkreisprognosedata-sort-value="2021-01-31"23–31 Jan 20212922.52510652.54
Wahlkreisprognosedata-sort-value="2020-11-17"10–17 Nov 202033.522.524853.53.59.5
INSAdata-sort-value="2020-11-06"2–5 Nov 20201,032332222965311
INSAdata-sort-value="2020-10-15"5–12 Oct 20201,004332222874411
INSAdata-sort-value="2020-09-04"24 Aug–2 Sep 20201,012332222954511
Wahlkreisprognosedata-sort-value="2020-08-18"9–18 Aug 20203420.520105.55513.5
Infratest dimapdata-sort-value="2020-08-04"30 Jul–4 Aug 20201,000322024106448
Wahlkreisprognosedata-sort-value="2020-06-22"17–22 Jun 202035.521198664.514.5
INSAdata-sort-value="2020-06-25"15–22 Jun 20201,016352222863313
INSAdata-sort-value="2020-05-19"14–19 May 20201,010342221875312
Wahlkreisprognosedata-sort-value="2020-05-10"2–10 May 2020352517.583.58310
Wahlkreisprognosedata-sort-value="2020-04-19"14–19 Apr 2020342620.58443.58
INSAdata-sort-value="2020-03-31"25–31 Mar 20201,018372318774414
INSAdata-sort-value="2020-03-09"5–9 Mar 20201,034382515864413
Wahlkreisprognosedata-sort-value="2020-02-13"13 Feb 20204125.51010.554415.5
INSAdata-sort-value="2020-02-13"10–13 Feb 20201,006402514764415
Infratest dimapdata-sort-value="2020-02-10"7–10 Feb 20201,0073924131054515
Forsadata-sort-value="2020-02-07"6 Feb 20201,003372412974713
INSAdata-sort-value="2020-02-06"5–6 Feb 20201,006342319667511
Infratest dimapdata-sort-value="2020-01-25"21–25 Jan 20201,00032241986658
2019 state electiondata-sort-value="2019-10-27"27 Oct 201931.023.421.78.25.25.04.97.6

Hypothetical scenarios

Polling firmFieldwork dateSample
size
Ramelow listAfDCDUSPDGrüneFDPBSWOthersLead
Wahlkreisprognose9873537154.53.552
25.53314.53.517.567.5

Minister President polling

Polling firmFieldwork dateSample
size
None/
Unsure
Lead

Linke

AfD

CDU

CDU

SPD

Grüne

Grüne

Grüne

FDP

Independent

BSW
INSA1,0001818114113291511
2620546
Wahlkreisprognose98740301146910
332610451397
50272323
45243121
49133836
2025555
2830422
45154030
INSA1,00034181243116
INSAdata-sort-value="2023-04-24"17–24 Apr 20231,00035161263119
Wahlkreisprognosedata-sort-value="2022-12-11"5–11 Dec 20221,0164131881210
Wahlkreisprognosedata-sort-value="2022-10-31"25–31 Oct 20221,00835261114149
Wahlkreisprognose29 Aug–6 Sep 20221,00032261414146
INSAdata-sort-value="2022-07-11"4–11 Jul 20221,0193811434427
Wahlkreisprognosedata-sort-value="2022-05-30" 23–30 May 20221,000401815161122
Wahlkreisprognosedata-sort-value="2022-04-14"6–14 Apr 2022994381613181520
INSAdata-sort-value="2022-04-11"4–11 Apr 20221,02737954928
INSAdata-sort-value="2020-09-04"24 Aug–2 Sep 20201,01242973253233
INSAdata-sort-value="2020-03-12"5–9 Mar 20201,03456162140
Forsadata-sort-value="2020-02-07"6 Feb 20201,003649631855
Infratest dimapdata-sort-value="2020-01-28"21–25 Jan 20201,000609191041

Preferred coalition

Polling firmFieldwork dateSample
size
AssessmentLinke
SPD
BSW
Linke
SPD
Grüne
Linke
SPD
Linke
CDU
BSW
Linke
CDU
SPD
Linke
CDU
Linke
CDU
SPD
FDP
Linke
AfD
CDU
SPD
Grüne
CDU
SPD
Grüne
FDP
CDU
SPD
FDP
AfD
BSW
AfD
CDU
FDP
AfD
CDU
Wahlkreisprognose987Positive3332323331271719283229 colspan="2"41
Infratest dimap28 Jun–3 Jul 20231,193Positive2726211327 colspan="2"31
Negative6767738167 colspan="2"63
Infratest dimapdata-sort-value="2020-08-06" rowspan="2"30 Jul–4 Aug 20201,000Positive colspan="3"454332362119
Negative colspan="3"52 colspan="2"5263607678
Infratest dimapdata-sort-value="2020-01-28" rowspan="2"21–25 Jan 20201,000Positive colspan="3"433319
Negative colspan="3"546479

Results

Members

ConstituencyMemberPartyVotes
001Eichsfeld IKönig, Thadäus CDU54.3%
002Eichsfeld IITasch, Christina CDU47.1%
003Nordhausen IProphet, JörgAfD40.3%
004Nordhausen IIDüben-Schaumann, KerstinAfD39.8%
005Wartburgkreis IKrell, UweAfD38.5%
006Wartburgkreis II – EisenachJary, UlrikeCDU42.4%
007Wartburgkreis IIIMalsch, MarcusCDU46.3%
008Unstrut-Hainich-Kreis IUrbach, JonasCDU37.1%
009Unstrut-Hainich-Kreis IIMöller, StefanAfD39.7%
010Kyffhäuserkreis I – Eichsfeld IIISchard, StefanCDU42.0%
011Kyffhäuserkreis IICotta, JensAfD46.5%
012Schmalkalden-Meiningen IRottstedt, VivienAfD37.4%
013Schmalkalden-Meiningen IIAbicht, JanAfD39.8%
014Gotha IKramer, MarcelAfD37.3%
015Gotha IISteinbrück, StephanAfD34.7%
016Sömmerda I – Gotha IIIHaseloff, DanielAfD38.6%
017Sömmerda IICzuppon, TorstenAfD42.8%
018Hildburghausen I – Schmalkalden-Meiningen IIIHoffmann, NadineAfD41.6%
019Sonneberg ITreutler, JürgenAfD42.6%
020Hildburghausen II – Sonneberg IIBerger, MelanieAfD41.6%
021Suhl – Schmalkalden-Meiningen IVLuhn, ThomasAfD32.8%
022Ilm-Kreis IBühl, AndreasCDU39.6%
023Ilm-Kreis IIKießling, OlafAfD40.2%
024Erfurt ISchlösser, SaschaAfD35.7%
025Erfurt IIWaßmann, NiklasCDU33.7%
026Erfurt IIIRamelow, BodoDIE LINKE42.4%
027Erfurt IVErfurth, MarekAfD26.7%
028Saalfeld-Rudolstadt IBenninghaus, ThomasAfD37.5%
029Saalfeld-Rudolstadt IIHäußer, DenisAfD38.6%
030Weimarer Land I – Saalfeld-Rudolstadt IIINauer, Brunhilde Ursula MargitAfD38.2%
031Weimar I – Weimarer Land IIGerhardt, PeterAfD38.3%
032Weimar IIGroße-Röthig, UlrikeDIE LINKE33.1%
033Saale-Orla-Kreis IThrum, UweAfD47.4%
034Saale-Orla-Kreis IIMühlmann, RingoAfD44.6%
035Saale-Holzland-Kreis ITiesler, StephanCDU39.8%
036Saale-Holzland-Kreis IIMuhsal, WiebkeAfD38.9%
037Jena IThomas, JensDIE LINKE33.5%
038Jena IIGüngör, Lena SaniyeDIE LINKE25.1%
039Greiz ISchweinsburg, MartinaCDU46.7%
040Greiz IITischner, ChristianCDU43.0%
041Gera ILaudenbach, Dieter MichaelAfD36.9%
042Gera IIDr. Lauerwald, WolfgangAfD43.6%
043Altenburger Land IHoffmann, ThomasAfD42.4%
044Altenburger Land IIBraga, TorbenAfD42.8%
List Müller, Anja DIE LINKE
Schaft, Christian
König-Preuss, Katharina
Schubert, Andreas
Mitteldorf, Katja
Prof. Dr. Hoff, Benjamin Immanuel
Stark, Linda
Hande, Ronald
Höcke, BjörnAfD
Dr. Dietrich, Jens
Jankowski, Denny
Voigt, MarioCDU
Meißner, Beate
Zippel, Christoph
Worm, Henry
Rosin, Marion
Gerbothe, Carolin
Geibert, Lennart
Dr. Weißkopf, Wolfgang
Heber, Claudia
Kowalleck, Maik
Croll, Jane
Henkel, Martin
Maier, GeorgSPD
Dr. Klisch, Cornelia
Hey, Matthias
Merz, Janine
Liebscher, Lutz
Schenk, Katharina
Wolf, KatjaBSW
Schütz, Steffen
Quasebarth, Steffen
Hupach, Sigrid
Dr. Augsten, Frank
Hoffmeister, Dirk
Küntzel, Sven
Kummer, Tilo
Kästner, Alexander
Herzog, Matthias
Behrendt, Nina
Wirsing, Anke
Hutschenreuther, Ralph
Kobelt, Roberto
Dr. Wogawa, Stefan

Electorate

DemographicLinkeAfDCDUGrüneFDPBSWOther
data-sort-type="number" style="background:;"data-sort-type="number" style="background:;"data-sort-type="number" style="background:;"data-sort-type="number" style="background:;"data-sort-type="number" style="background:;"data-sort-type="number" style="background:;"data-sort-type="number" style="background:;"
Total vote13.1%32.8%23.6%6.1%3.2%1.1%15.8%4.3%
Sex
Men12%38%22%6%3%1%14%4%
Women14%27%24%6%4%1%18%6%
Age
16–24 years old16%38%13%7%5%1%12%8%
25–34 years old14%36%16%7%6%1%13%7%
35–44 years old10%36%21%7%5%2%13%6%
45–59 years old10%37%24%5%3%1%15%5%
60–69 years old13%32%26%5%1%1%19%3%
70 and older20%19%31%7%1%1%19%2%
Employment status
Self-employed6%30%32%4%5%3%15%5%
Employees14%33%23%6%4%1%15%4%
Workers8%49%15%4%2%1%16%5%
Pensioners16%23%30%7%1%1%19%3%
Education
Simple education11%47%21%4%1%0%12%4%
Medium education11%41%22%4%1%1%17%3%
High education16%21%26%10%6%2%15%4%
Source: Infratest dimap[24]

Analysis and aftermath

This was the first time the AfD has won the plurality of seats in a state election. With over one-third of seats, the AfD has a Sperrminorität ("blocking minority"), meaning that certain parliamentary actions requiring a two-thirds majority, such as the appointment of judges, amendments to the state constitution, and an early dissolution of parliament, cannot take place without its support even if it is not in government.

Chancellor Olaf Scholz called on other political parties to prevent the AfD from governing by upholding a "firewall" against them.[25] He described the election results as "bitter" and "worrying" and urged other parties to form stable governments without involving "right-wing extremists." In response, AfD co-leader Alice Weidel stated that voters in Thuringia and Saxony had given her party a "clear mandate to govern" and that "firewalls are undemocratic."

Though a CDU-AfD coalition would have a majority, all other parties have ruled out forming a coalition with the party and its Thuringian leader, Björn Höcke, due to their extremist tendencies. The State Office for Protection of the Constitution classifies the Thuringian AfD as a right-wing extremist organisation, and Höcke has been found guilty of using the forbidden Nazi slogan "Everything for Germany". The CDU has historically declined to collaborate with Die Linke (The Left), though a coalition with BSW, also a radical leftist party, was also considered unappealing by party members.

In the aftermath to the elections in both Thuringia and Saxony, Sahra Wagenknecht, leader of the BSW, stated her preferences to go into a coalition with either the CDU and/or the SPD in an interview with ARD.[26]

Landtag opening session controversy

The office of President of the Landtag, the body's presiding officer, is traditionally reserved for the largest party in parliament. However, the four other parties all rejected the possibility of the AfD holding this position given its classification as an extremist party. In addition, AfD made known its candidate for President would be its MdL Wiebke Muhsal, who was convicted and fined for defrauding the Landtag administration in 2015. The other parties saw this as a deliberate provocation.[27]

To avoid a potential scenario where a President of the Landtag is elected with AfD votes, or that of a deadlock with AfD candidates repeatedly being voted down, CDU and BSW jointly proposed changing the election procedure at the first sitting on 26 September. The election requires a simple majority, and under the rule then in effect the largest party had the right of nomination (Vorschlagsrecht). If that nominee failed to be elected twice, the rule stated that "new candidates may be proposed for further ballots" but was unclear who may do this; it was the opinion of AfD that they alone still had the right of nomination, and that the rules could not be changed without a duly elected President. The new proposal was to allow all parties to nominate candidates from the outset. CDU put forward as a consensus candidate its MdL Thadäus König, who received the highest share of constituency votes of any candidate in this election. The other parties indicated they would support him.[28]

Father of the house Jürgen Treutler of AfD, who was the presiding officer of the Landtag until the election of a President, declined to allow a vote on the rule change, ignored other motions and requests to speak, and ultimately prevented any other business from taking place by refusing to recognize a quorum. He also gave an openly political speech, which was seen as a breach of decorum. The other parties, in particular CDU parliamentary leader Andreas Bühl, accused Treutler of not acting in a non-partisan manner, with Bühl angrily condemning what he called "a seizure of power" during the contentious session. The sitting was abandoned and CDU, supported by other parties, filed an emergency complaint with the Thuringian Constitutional Court in response.[29] [30] Treutler then filed a countercomplaint on 27 September, asking the court to dismiss the CDU complaint as inadmissible.[31]

In the late hours of 27 September, the court ruled unanimously in favor of CDU's complaint. It held that there was no exclusive right for the largest parliamentary group to propose candidates for the office of President of the Landtag, and thus that amending the voting procedure was permissible. The court also confirmed that members have the right to debate and amend the rules before the election of a President of the Landtag.[32] [33] [34] Treutler was thus required to put the motion to a vote at the reconstituted sitting on 28 September, which passed. The CDU candidate König was then elected President with 54 votes to 32 for Muhsal.

In response to this crisis, König advocated for changing the definition of father of the house from the member with the oldest physical age to that with the longest tenure of service; this definition is already used in the federal Bundestag.[35] Die Welt noted that Treutler had been substituted for a unanimously nominated constituency candidate relatively close to the election, and speculated that it was to ensure the party would supply the father of the house. When the paper asked Höcke about this, he simply replied "you can be sure that we at AfD Thuringia have very far-reaching strategic planning".[36]

Government formation

The day after the election, the CDU executive voted unanimously to seek exploratory talks with the BSW and SPD.[37] BSW leader Katja Wolf stated that federal leader Sahra Wagenknecht would be attending these initial discussions to "stand up for war and peace issues," but would not be involved in further negotiations. Bodo Ramelow and The Left called for the CDU to "act responsibly and find a majority among democratic parties". They also denied rumours that Left party deputies could defect to the BSW to provide the prospective government with a parliamentary majority.[38]

In a speech on 20 September, federal CDU leader Friedrich Merz described a coalition including BSW in either Thuringia or Saxony as "very, very, very unlikely".[39]

Exploratory talks for a CDU-BSW-SPD coalition, the so-called “blackberry coalition", began on 30 September. This proposed minority government is still one seat short of a majority, requiring support or abstentions from The Left to conduct business.[40] This is akin to the previous Second Ramelow cabinet, which took the form of a Left-SPD-Green minority government that was tolerated by CDU without any formal agreement. Ramelow stated he would not object to Mario Voigt's election as Minister-President.[41]

On 17 October, Die Welt reported that exploratory talks had concluded and a preliminary distribution of ministries had taken place. There was still no conclusion as to how to achieve a majority.[42] CDU and SPD confirmed the talks had finished, but described the material leaked to Die Welt as "fake".[43]

Representing the Left, Ramelow told the Frankfurter Allgemeine Sonntagszeitung that the twelve Left MdLs would vote en bloc on any issue and he would not individually be a "constant majority-maker" for the coalition.[44]

On 25 October, amid reports that talks were stalling, Wagenknecht was heavily criticized for personally vetoing compromise foreign policy language that was to be inserted into the preamble of a report on the exploratory talks.[45] In an interview with ARD, Merz accused Wagenknecht of "wanting to run a federal election campaign where she constantly says no" instead of attempting to lead, and that his party would not compromise on NATO membership and aid to Ukraine.[46] Though BSW state leaders expressed their desire to continue, SPD state leader Maier told MDR that he had little hope that coalition talks could succeed. Despite this, after a pause in talks over the following weekend, the party leaders announced they had reached a consensus on foreign policy issues and decided to begin formal coalition negotiations.[47]

A completed draft coalition agreement was presented in the Landtag on 22 November. Ratification by each party and the election of Voigt as Minister-President to come in December.[48]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Ramelow . Bodo . 16 January 2024 . Für alle X Accounts, die mich dauernd fragen wann denn nun die Landtagswahlen in Thüringen wären. . X (formerly Twitter) . 16 January 2024 . https://web.archive.org/web/20240116133008/https://twitter.com/bodoramelow/status/1747247885534855666 . live.
  2. Web site: 2024-08-30 . German elections: Far-right AfD on brink of political earthquake . 2024-09-01 . BBC News . en-GB . 2 September 2024 . https://web.archive.org/web/20240902144719/https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c05jvve89g3o . live .
  3. Web site: Germany's far-right AfD: 'We have a clear mandate to govern'. 1 September 2024. Deutsche Welle. 1 September 2024. 1 September 2024. https://web.archive.org/web/20240901221728/https://www.dw.com/en/far-right-afd-we-have-a-clear-mandate-to-govern/a-70105904. live.
  4. News: German far right wins first major election since World War II . 1 September 2024 . 2 September 2024 . The Washington Post . en . 1 September 2024 . https://web.archive.org/web/20240901170435/https://www.politico.eu/article/germany-far-right-elections-victory-afd-cdu-olaf-scholz/ . live.
  5. News: Far right set to win in a German state for the first time since WWII . 1 September 2024 . 2 September 2024 . The Washington Post . en . 3 September 2024 . https://web.archive.org/web/20240903120713/https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/2024/09/01/germany-far-right-afd-elections/ . live.
  6. Web site: 1 September 2024 . Far-right AfD wins eastern state in Germany's regional election . 2 September 2024 . Al Jazeera . en . 1 September 2024 . https://web.archive.org/web/20240901165329/https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2024/9/1/germanys-far-right-party-likely-to-make-gains-in-eastern-region-elections . live .
  7. Web site: 1 September 2024 . Success of far-right AfD shows east and west Germany are drifting further apart . 2 September 2024 . The Guardian . en . 1 September 2024 . https://web.archive.org/web/20240901185234/https://www.theguardian.com/world/article/2024/sep/01/success-far-right-afd-shows-east-west-germany-drifting-further-apart . live .
  8. Web site: 1 September 2024 . German far right hails 'historic' election victory in east . 2 September 2024 . BBC News . en . 2 September 2024 . https://web.archive.org/web/20240902144402/https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cn02w01xr2jo . live .
  9. Web site: landesrecht.thueringen.de . 9 February 2020 . 31 July 2018 . https://web.archive.org/web/20180731153823/http://landesrecht.thueringen.de/jportal/portal/t/glw/page/bsthueprod.psml/action/portlets.jw.MainAction?p1=n&eventSubmit_doNavigate=searchInSubtreeTOC&showdoccase=1&doc.hl=0&doc.id=jlr-WahlGTH2012pP18&doc.part=S&toc.poskey=#focuspoint . live .
  10. Web site: Wahltermine in Thüringen . https://web.archive.org/web/20210425070503/http://www.wahlen.thueringen.de/wahltermine.asp . 25 April 2021 . auf wahlen.thueringen.de.
  11. News: Troubled Thuringia gets fresh election dates. 21 February 2020. Deutsche Welle. 22 February 2020. 24 May 2021. https://web.archive.org/web/20210524183802/https://www.dw.com/en/troubled-thuringia-gets-fresh-election-dates/a-52472029. live.
  12. Web site: Landtagswahl in Thüringen auf September verschoben. State election in Thuringia postponed to September. 14 January 2021. MDR . de . 24 January 2021. 21 January 2021. https://web.archive.org/web/20210121205109/https://www.mdr.de/thueringen/wahltermin-thueringen-verschoben-100.html. live.
  13. News: Lehmann . Timo . Winter . Steffen . Weiter Chaos in Thüringen: Warum nichts aus der vorgezogenen Neuwahl des Landtags wurde . Further chaos in Thuringia: Why nothing came of the early state election . www.spiegel.de . 16 July 2021 . de . 16 July 2021 . 16 July 2021 . https://web.archive.org/web/20210716170453/https://www.spiegel.de/politik/deutschland/thueringen-warum-nichts-aus-der-vorgezogenen-neuwahl-des-landtags-wurde-a-e3310c40-1294-4434-aaf6-c287b23f82ba . live .
  14. News: Landtagswahl abgesagt: Thüringer Landtag wird nicht aufgelöst . MDR . 16 July 2021 . de . 16 July 2021 . 16 July 2021 . https://web.archive.org/web/20210716170455/https://www.mdr.de/nachrichten/thueringen/landtagswahl/landtag-thueringen-neuwahl-entscheidung-100.html . live .
  15. Web site: Wahlen in Thüringen. Thüringer Landesamt für Statistik. 9 February 2020. 15 April 2021. https://web.archive.org/web/20210415024242/https://wahlen.thueringen.de/datenbank/wahl1/wahl.asp?wahlart=LW&wJahr=2019&zeigeErg=Land. live.
  16. News: Desolation and hope in German city of Erfurt after far-right vote. Deutsche Welle. 9 February 2020. 9 February 2020. 24 May 2021. https://web.archive.org/web/20210524174637/https://www.dw.com/en/desolation-and-hope-in-german-city-of-erfurt-after-far-right-vote/a-52308265. live.
  17. News: Germany AfD: Thuringia PM quits amid fury over far right. BBC. 8 February 2020. 9 February 2020. 12 January 2021. https://web.archive.org/web/20210112061820/https://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-51399445. live.
  18. News: Germany: Thuringia state premier Kemmerich quits, 'effective immediately'. Deutsche Welle. 8 February 2020. 9 February 2020. 9 February 2020. https://web.archive.org/web/20200209151745/https://www.dw.com/en/germany-thuringia-state-premier-kemmerich-quits-effective-immediately/a-52306048. live.
  19. News: Germany's Thuringia gets left-wing state premier in re-run vote. 4 March 2020. 5 March 2020. 23 April 2020. https://web.archive.org/web/20200423021000/https://www.politico.eu/article/germanys-thuringia-gets-left-wing-state-premier-in-re-run-vote/. live.
  20. Web site: SPD state executive nominates Maier for state chairmanship and top candidate. 15 June 2020. MDR . 16 June 2020 . https://web.archive.org/web/20200616004000/https://www.mdr.de/thueringen/spd-spitzenkandidat-maier-100.html . live.
  21. Web site: Thuringian CDU still without a top candidate. 16 November 2020. Mdr.de. 15 December 2020. 22 November 2020. https://web.archive.org/web/20201122004933/https://www.mdr.de/nachrichten/politik/regional/cdu-thueringen-sucht-spitzenkandidat-fuer-landtagswahl-100.html. live.
  22. Web site: Mario Voigt soll CDU-Spitzenkandidat zur Landtagswahl werden. Mario Voigt is to become the CDU top candidate for the state election. 17 November 2020. Mdr.de. de. 24 January 2021. 26 January 2021. https://web.archive.org/web/20210126034500/https://www.mdr.de/thueringen/cdu-spitzenkandidat-landtagswahl-mario-voigt-100.html. live.
  23. Web site: Ist das Kemmerich-Problem der FDP jetzt gelöst?. Has the FDP's Kemmerich problem now been solved?. 11 December 2020. . de . 11 December 2020 . https://web.archive.org/web/20201211152949/https://www.tagesspiegel.de/politik/nach-verzicht-auf-spitzenkandidatur-in-thueringen-ist-das-kemmerich-problem-der-fdp-jetzt-geloest/26710434.html . live.
  24. Web site: Wer wählte wen in Thüringen? . September 1, 2024 . Infratest dimap.
  25. Web site: AfD victory in Thuringia: Scholz urges 'firewall' to keep out far right . 2024-09-02 . www.bbc.com . en-GB . 6 September 2024 . https://web.archive.org/web/20240906002457/https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cd05pdmzgp5o . live.
  26. Web site: Germany: Thuringia and Saxony elections propel far-right AfD – DW – 09/02/2024 . 2024-09-02 . dw.com . en . 2 September 2024 . https://web.archive.org/web/20240902144719/https://www.dw.com/en/germany-thuringia-and-saxony-elections-propel-far-right-afd/a-70106147 . live .
  27. News: CDU-Politiker König neuer Landtagspräsident in Thüringen . tagesschau.de . de . 30 September 2024. https://web.archive.org/web/20240930194635/https://www.tagesschau.de/inland/thueringen-landtagspraesident-koenig-100.html. live.
  28. News: Joswig . Gareth . Konstituierung des Thüringer Landtags: Eskalation vorprogrammiert . Die Tageszeitung: taz . 21 September 2024 . de . 21 September 2024. https://web.archive.org/web/20240921160753/https://taz.de/Konstituierung-des-Thueringer-Landtags/!6037907/. live.
  29. News: Thüringen: Erste Sitzung im Landtag unterbrochen – CDU ruft Verfassungsgericht an . Der Spiegel . 26 September 2024 . de . 26 September 2024. https://web.archive.org/web/20240926142513/https://www.spiegel.de/politik/deutschland/thueringen-erste-sitzung-im-landtag-unterbrochen-cdu-ruft-verfassungsgericht-an-a-2658ef34-e68f-4b1b-9bac-d8a3537743e6. live.
  30. News: Wie es nach dem Eklat im Thüringer Landtag weitergeht . 27 September 2024 . tagesschau.de . de . 27 September 2024. https://web.archive.org/web/20240927111342/https://www.tagesschau.de/inland/innenpolitik/thueringen-eklat-landtag-104.html.
  31. News: Bei der Wahl des Landtagspräsidenten in Thüringen wollten mehrere Fraktionen der AfD das Vorschlagsrecht nehmen. Nun entscheidet das Verfassungsgericht . 27 September 2024 . Neue Zürcher Zeitung . de . 27 September 2024 . https://web.archive.org/web/20240927150339/https://www.nzz.ch/international/eklat-im-thueringer-landtag-jetzt-entscheidet-das-landesverfassungsgericht-ld.1850424. live.
  32. News: Streit um Landtagspräsidentenwahl in Thüringen: Verfassungsgericht gibt CDU recht. Von Kai Mudra and Elmar Otto . 27 September 2024 . de . 27 September 2024 . https://web.archive.org/web/20240927205148/https://www.thueringer-allgemeine.de/politik/article407356323/streit-um-landtagspraesidentenwahl-in-thueringen-verfassungsgericht-gibt-cdu-recht.html. live.
  33. News: AfD unterliegt der CDU vor Verfassungsgericht. 27 September 2024. zdfheute . de . 27 September 2024 . https://web.archive.org/web/20240927232058/https://www.zdf.de/nachrichten/politik/deutschland/thueringer-landtag-verfassungsgericht-entscheidung-afd-cdu-100.html. live.
  34. News: Thüringer Verfassungsgericht gibt CDU-Antrag statt. 27 September 2024. tagesschau.de . de. 27 September 2024. https://web.archive.org/web/20240927215847/https://www.tagesschau.de/eilmeldung/gericht-thueringen-landtag-100.html. live.
  35. News: Thüringer Landtag: Landtagspräsident fordert neue Regelung für Alterspräsidenten . mdr.de . 25 October 2024 . de.
  36. News: Wer ist eigentlich Alterspräsident Treutler? - WELT . Die Welt . 27 September 2024 . de.
  37. Web site: AfD will mit CDU und BSW sprechen - CDU stattdessen mit SPD und BSW. AfD wants to talk to CDU and BSW – CDU instead with SPD and BSW. 2 September 2024. de. . 5 September 2024 . https://web.archive.org/web/20240905083352/https://www.mdr.de/nachrichten/thueringen/wahl-koalition-afd-cdu-bsw-100.html . live.
  38. Web site: Nach der Thüringen-Wahl: Das sagen die Parteien jetzt. After the Thuringia election: This is what the parties are saying now!. 4 September 2024. de. . 6 September 2024 . https://web.archive.org/web/20240906023329/https://www.mdr.de/nachrichten/thueringen/wahl-afd-landtagspraesident-100.html . live.
  39. News: Merz hält Koalition mit BSW in Ländern für unwahrscheinlich . 27 September 2024 . tagesschau.de . de . 20 September 2024 . https://web.archive.org/web/20240920055352/https://www.tagesschau.de/inland/innenpolitik/thueringen-sachsen-bsw-cdu-100.html. live.
  40. News: Sondierungen in Thüringen: CDU, BSW und SPD nähern sich weiter an . www.mdr.de . 2 October 2024 . de . 2 October 2024 . https://web.archive.org/web/20241002153703/https://www.mdr.de/nachrichten/thueringen/sondierung-cdu-bsw-spd-gespraeche-100.html. live.
  41. News: Thüringer CDU beschließt Sondierungsgespräche mit BSW und SPD . stern.de . 23 September 2024 . de . 23 September 2024 . https://web.archive.org/web/20240923124106/https://www.stern.de/politik/deutschland/cdu-thueringen-sondiert-gemeinsame-regierung-mit-dem-bsw-35085534.html. live.
  42. News: Sondierung abgeschlossen: Verwirrung um Vergabe der Ministerposten in Thüringen . Die Welt . 17 October 2024 . de.
  43. News: Sondierungen in Thüringen: CDU und SPD bezeichnen angebliche Einigung auf Ministerien als "Fake" . MDR . 17 October 2024 . de.
  44. News: Ramelow fordert "Fairness-Abkommen" von CDU . MDR . 14 October 2024 . de.
  45. News: SPD in Thüringen glaubt nicht mehr an eine "Brombeer-Koalition" . tagesschau.de . de.
  46. News: Bericht aus Berlin: Merz macht klare Ansage an Wagenknecht . tagesschau.de . 27 October 2024 . de.
  47. News: Thüringen: CDU und SPD streben Koalitionsverhandlungen mit Wagenknecht-Bündnis an . Der Spiegel . 28 October 2024 . de.
  48. News: Worauf sich die Brombeer-Koalition in Thüringen geeinigt hat . MDR.de . 22 November 2024 . de.