2016 Baden-Württemberg state election explained

Election Name:2016 Baden-Württemberg state election
Country:Baden-Württemberg
Type:parliamentary
Turnout:5,412,301 (70.4%)
4.2%
Previous Election:2011 Baden-Württemberg state election
Previous Year:2011
Next Election:2021 Baden-Württemberg state election
Next Year:2021
Seats For Election:All 143 seats in the Landtag of Baden-Württemberg
Majority Seats:72
Party1:Alliance 90/The Greens
Last Election1:36 seats, 24.1%
Seats1:47
Seat Change1: 11
Popular Vote1:1,622,631
Percentage1:30.3%
Swing1: 6.1%
Leader2:Guido Wolf
Party2:Christian Democratic Union (Germany)
Last Election2:60 seats, 39.0%
Seats2:42
Seat Change2: 18
Popular Vote2:1,447,249
Percentage2:27.0%
Swing2: 12.0%
Leader3:Jörg Meuthen
Party3:Alternative for Germany
Last Election3:Did not exist
Seats3:23
Seat Change3: 23
Popular Vote3:809,311
Percentage3:15.1%
Swing3:New party
Leader4:Nils Schmid
Party4:Social Democratic Party of Germany
Last Election4:35 seats, 23.1%
Seats4:19
Seat Change4: 16
Popular Vote4:679,872
Percentage4:12.7%
Swing4: 10.4%
Leader5:Hans-Ulrich Rülke
Party5:Free Democratic Party (Germany)
Last Election5:7 seats, 5.3%
Seats5:12
Seat Change5: 5
Popular Vote5:445,430
Percentage5:8.3%
Swing5: 3.0%
Leader6:Bernd Riexinger
Party6:The Left (Germany)
Last Election6:0 seats, 2.8%
Seats6:0
Seat Change6: 0
Popular Vote6:156,211
Percentage6:2.9%
Swing6: 0.1%
Map Size:300px
Minister-President
Posttitle:Minister-President
Before Election:Winfried Kretschmann
Before Party:Alliance 90/The Greens
After Election:Winfried Kretschmann
After Party:Alliance 90/The Greens

The 2016 Baden-Württemberg state election was held on 13 March 2016 to elect the members of the 15th Landtag of Baden-Württemberg. The incumbent government of The Greens and the Social Democratic Party (SPD) led by Minister-President Winfried Kretschmann lost its majority.

The Greens achieved a 6% swing and became the largest party in a state legislature for the first time. The Christian Democratic Union (CDU), which had previously been the largest party, lost a third of its voteshare and fell to second place. Alternative for Germany (AfD) contested its first state election in Baden-Württemberg, debuting at 15%. The SPD lost half its voteshare and fell to fourth place with 12.7%.

After the election, the Greens formed a coalition with the CDU, and Kretschmann was re-elected as Minister-President.

Campaign and issues

The Greens campaigned to keep Minister-President Winfried Kretschmann in office. Their central issues were energy, economics, and education. The CDU aimed to put an end to the green-red state government and usher in its own leading candidate Guido Wolf to head the state government. Themes in focus for the CDU were education policy, internal security, and the issue of infrastructure, including high-speed internet. The SPD, led by Nils Schmid, wanted to win more votes to continue the existing government coalition with The Greens. The SPD's campaign mainly focused on "good jobs", educational equality, and more time for the family. The electoral goal of the FDP, led by Hans-Ulrich Rülke, was to repeat its entry into the state parliament and possibly be involved in a governing coalition. They promised better education, the strengthening of the local business, and improvement of mobility. The AfD party campaigned to be elected into the state parliament for the first time. Its leading candidate Jörg Meuthen saw migration policy as an important election issue, alongside education, security, and energy transition.[1]

The election campaign was overshadowed by the European migrant crisis. In the crisis, Kretschmann supported the policies of Chancellor Angela Merkel.[2] Kretschmann said he saw no other person who could keep Europe together as Angela Merkel did. "Therefore, I pray every day that the Chancellor remains healthy."[3] CDU candidate Wolf also emphasized support for Merkel's "European solution" in the crisis, but in February 2016 tried to win more conservative voters by a joint proposal along with Rhineland-Palatinate CDU candidate Julia Klöckner for daily refugee quotas and border centers for migrants, which put additional pressure on Merkel.[4]

Parties

The table below lists parties represented in the previous Landtag of Baden-Württemberg.

NameIdeologyLeader(s)2011 result
Votes (%)Seats
bgcolor= CDUChristian Democratic Union of Germany
Christian democracyGuido Wolf39.0%
bgcolor= GrüneAlliance 90/The Greens
Green politicsWinfried Kretschmann24.2%
bgcolor= SPDSocial Democratic Party of Germany
Social democracyNils Schmid23.1%
bgcolor= FDPFree Democratic Party
Classical liberalismHans-Ulrich Rülke5.3%

Opinion polls

Key
Polling firmFieldwork dateSample
size
CDUGrüneSPDFDPLinkePiratenAfDOthersLead
2016 state electiondata-sort-value="2016-03-13"13 Mar 201627.030.312.78.32.90.415.13.33.3
Forschungsgruppe Wahlendata-sort-value="2016-03-10"7–10 Mar 20161,711293214641143
YouGovdata-sort-value="2016-03-092–9 Mar 2016974303212841132
Forsadata-sort-value="2016-03-08"2–8 Mar 20161,002273216731145
INSAdata-sort-value="2016-03-05"1–5 Mar 20161,00528.533.512.56.03.012.54.05.0
Forschungsgruppe Wahlendata-sort-value="2016-03-03"29 Feb–3 Mar 20161,058303213741132
Infratest dimapdata-sort-value="2016-03-02"29 Feb–2 Mar 20161,002283213841324
INSAdata-sort-value="2016-02-27"25–27 Feb 20161,03030.030.516.56.53.59.04.00.5
Forsadata-sort-value="2016-02-22"16–22 Feb 20161,06930301663114data-sort-value="0"Tie
INSAdata-sort-value="2016-02-20"19–20 Feb 20161,00030.030.516.07.03.010.03.50.5
Infratest dimapdata-sort-value="2016-02-16"11–16 Feb 20161,000312814841233
Customer Research 42data-sort-value="2016-02-07"27 Jan–7 Feb 20161,00033.126.115.65.15.510.54.17.0
INSAdata-sort-value="2016-02-01"26 Jan–1 Feb 20161,00033.528.513.57.03.510.04.05.0
Forschungsgruppe Wahlendata-sort-value="2016-01-20"18–20 Jan 20161,069342815631136
INSAdata-sort-value="2016-01-18"11–18 Jan 20161,0003529136.52.511.52.56
Infratest dimapdata-sort-value="2016-01-12"7–12 Jan 20161,000352815631037
Forsadata-sort-value="2015-12-11"2–11 Dec 20151,06435281953737
Infratest dimapdata-sort-value="2015-12-01"26 Nov–1 Dec 20151,000372518548312
Forschungsgruppe Wahlendata-sort-value="2015-11-18"16–18 Nov 20151,040372718536410
INSAdata-sort-value="2015-10-06"24 Sep–6 Oct 20151,003402416558216
Infratest dimapdata-sort-value="2015-09-22"17–22 Sep 20151,000392617545413
Allensbachdata-sort-value="2015-08-12"18 Jul–12 Aug 20151,04740.524.020.04.54.03.04.016.5
Forsadata-sort-value="2015-05-07"23 Apr–7 May 20151,010382620444412
Infratest dimapdata-sort-value="2015-03-24"19–24 Mar 20151,000382518554513
Infratest dimapdata-sort-value="2014-11-11"10–11 Nov 20141,000412220345519
TNS Infratestdata-sort-value="2014-09-17"17 Sep 2014412319444518
2014 European electiondata-sort-value="2014-05-25"25 May 201439.313.223.04.13.61.27.97.716.3
Infratest dimapdata-sort-value="2014-05-11"6–11 May 20141,000412120346520
Infratest dimapdata-sort-value="2013-11-05"4–5 Nov 20131,004432219445321
2013 federal electiondata-sort-value="2013-09-22"22 Sep 201345.711.020.66.24.82.35.24.225.1
Infratest dimapdata-sort-value="2013-05-15"13–15 May 20131,0053928194232311
Infratest dimapdata-sort-value="2012-05-08"7–8 May 20121,00037282142629
Emniddata-sort-value="2011-11-17"15–17 Nov 20111,00234322043432
Infratest dimapdata-sort-value="2011-11-16"8–16 Nov 20112,40337292232438
Infratest dimapdata-sort-value="2011-08-17"16–17 Aug 20111,0003629234357
Forsadata-sort-value="2011-04-29"18–29 Apr 20111,0043630224266
2011 state electiondata-sort-value="2011-03-27"27 Mar 201139.024.223.15.32.82.13.514.8

Results

See main article: 2016 Baden-Württemberg state election.
< 2011    > 2021  |-|colspan=7 | |-! colspan="2" rowspan="2" style="text-align:left; background:#e9e9e9; width:400px;"|Party! style="background:#e9e9e9; text-align:center;" colspan="3"|Popular vote! style="background:#e9e9e9; text-align:center;" colspan="3"|Seats|-! style="text-align:right; background:#e9e9e9; width:60px;"|Votes! style="text-align:right; background:#e9e9e9; width:40px;"|%! style="text-align:right; background:#e9e9e9; width:50px;"|+/–! style="text-align:right; background:#e9e9e9; width:30px;"|Seats! style="text-align:right; background:#e9e9e9; width:30px;"|+/–|-

|
Bündnis 90/Die Grünen || 1,622,631 || 30.3 || 6.1 || 47 || 11|-|
Christlich Demokratische Union Deutschlands – CDU || 1,447,249 || 27.0 || 12.0 || 42 || 18|-|
Alternative für Deutschland – AfD || 809,311 || 15.1 || 15.1 || 23 || 23|-|
Sozialdemokratische Partei Deutschlands – SPD || 679,872 || 12.7 || 10.4 || 19 || 16|-|
Freie Demokratische Partei – FDP || 445,430 || 8.3 || 3.0 || 12 || 5|-|
Die Linke || 156,211 || 2.9 || 0.1 || 0 || |-|
Allianz für Fortschritt und Aufbruch – ALFA || 54,764 || 1.0 || 1.0 || 0 || |-|
Ökologisch-Demokratische Partei – ÖDP || 38,509 || 0.7 || 0.2 || 0 || |-|
Nationaldemokratische Partei Deutschlands – NPD || 23,605 || 0.4 || 0.6 || 0 || |-|
Piratenpartei || 21,773 || 0.4 || 0.6 || 0 || |-| style="background:white;"| || align=left |Other parties|| || || || || |- style="background:#e9e9e9;"| style="text-align:right;" colspan="2"| Valid votes| 5,360,351| 99.0| 0.4| colspan="2" rowspan="2" style="color:#bab9b9;"||- style="background:#e9e9e9;"| style="text-align:right;" colspan="2"| Invalid votes| 51,950| 1.0| 0.4|- style="background:#e9e9e9;"| style="text-align:right;" colspan="2"| Totals and voter turnout| 5,412,301 | 70.4 | 4.2| 143| 5|- style="background:#bab9b9;"| colspan="2" | Electorate| 7,685,778| 100.00| | colspan=2||-| colspan="11" style="text-align:left;"| Source: Landeswahlleiter[5] [6] |}

Aftermath

In the prior election of 2011, the Green/SPD coalition obtained a majority (73 of 138) of votes in the Landtag, including two opposition votes;[7] however after the 2016 vote, the coalition fell short of a majority, with a combined total of 66 seats (72 needed for a majority). Kretschmann's popularity propelled the Green Party to a gain of 11 seats, making history as the first time the Green party has been the largest party in State-level election results. However, the Greens' coalition partner, the SPD, lost 16 seats, thus depriving the Greens' of a clear majority of leftists.[8]

There were several possible and probable working majorities among the five parties in the Landtag. Expanding the existing coalition into a three-party "traffic light" coalition (green-red-yellow) by including the FDP would have given the administration a working majority of 6.[9] Coalitions with AfD appeared unlikely: a CDU-AfD coalition would be 7 short of a majority in the Landtag, so would have also needed to include the FDP to make a majority and remove Kretschmann as minister-president. Removal of Kretschmann was unlikely; CDU leader Guido Wolf briefly sought to get the Social Democrats into a right-of-centre coalition with the FDP (with Wolf as state minister-president), but his SPD counterpart Nils Schmid pointed out that such a coalition would frustrate voters due to the personal popularity of Kretschmann. If it were possible to elect the minister-president directly, Kretschmann would have won an outright majority according to polls; he was even favored by 45% of CDU supporters.[10]

In May 2016, the Landtag confirmed Kretschmann's leadership in a secret ballot.[11] He won 82 votes leading a "green-black" coalition with a nominal majority of 89 Landestag members (Green 47, CDU 42). A similar "black-green" coalition headed by the CDU has governed in Hesse since the similarly indecisive 2013 elections, but this is the first time the Green Party is the lead coalition partner in a coalition with the CDU (previously, they led a coalition with the SPD). Kretschmann formed the Cabinet Kretschmann II as the state government.

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Der Kampf um die Macht in Baden-Württemberg . Stimme.de . 2016-01-10 . 2016-03-15.
  2. News: Wahl in Baden-Württemberg: Kretschmann setzt auf Europa in der Flüchtlingskrise - Wahl in Baden-Württemberg . Faz.net . FAZ . 2016-02-28 . 2016-03-15. Soldt . Rüdiger .
  3. Web site: Winfried Kretschmann im Interview: "Ich bete jeden Tag für Angela Merkel" - Politik - Tagesspiegel . de. Tagesspiegel.de . 2016-03-15.
  4. Web site: Flüchtlingspolitik: CDU-Wahlkämpfer erhöhen Druck auf Merkel . Tagesschau.de . 2016-03-15.
  5. Web site: Landtagswahl 2016 - Statistisches Landesamt Baden-Württemberg. statistik-bw.de.
  6. Web site: tagesschau.de. tagesschau.de. wahl.tagesschau.de. 13 March 2016. 16 March 2016. https://web.archive.org/web/20160316125345/http://wahl.tagesschau.de/wahlen/2016-03-13-LT-DE-BW/index-content.shtml. dead.
  7. News: Erster grüner Ministerpräsident: Kretschmann erhält sogar zwei Oppositionsstimmen. Die Welt. 12 May 2011.
  8. News: Greens face rightward shift despite victory . 15 March 2016 . Ben . Knight . Deutsche Welle . en . 8 July 2019 .
  9. Web site: Landtagswahl Baden-Württemberg: Studenten verpassen AfD einen Dämpfer. 15 October 2017.
  10. Web site: ZEIT ONLINE | Lesen Sie zeit.de mit Werbung oder im PUR-Abo. Sie haben die Wahl.
  11. Web site: Baden-Württemberg debuts Green-led coalition with Merkel's conservative party | DW | 02.05.2016.