2008 Hessian state election explained

Election Name:2008 Hesse state election
Country:Hesse
Type:parliamentary
Ongoing:no
Previous Election:2003 Hessian state election
Previous Year:2003
Next Election:2009 Hessian state election
Next Year:2009
Seats For Election:All 110 seats of the Landtag of Hesse
Majority Seats:56
Election Date:27 January 2008
Turnout:2,742,959 (64.3%)
0.3%
Leader1:Roland Koch
Party1:Christian Democratic Union of Germany
Last Election1:56 seats, 48.8%
Seats1:42
Seat Change1: 14
Popular Vote1:1,009,775
Percentage1:36.8%
Swing1: 12.0%
Leader2:Andrea Ypsilanti
Party2:Social Democratic Party of Germany
Last Election2:33 seats, 29.1%
Seats2:42
Seat Change2: 9
Popular Vote2:1,006,263
Percentage2:36.7%
Swing2: 7.6%
Leader3:Jörg-Uwe Hahn
Party3:Free Democratic Party (Germany)
Last Election3:9 seats, 7.9%
Seats3:11
Seat Change3: 2
Popular Vote3:258,550
Percentage3:9.4%
Swing3: 1.5%
Leader4:Tarek Al-Wazir
Party4:Alliance 90/The Greens
Last Election4:12 seats, 10.1%
Seats4:9
Seat Change4: 3
Popular Vote4:206,610
Percentage4:7.5%
Swing4: 2.6%
Leader5:Willi van Ooyen
Party5:The Left (Germany)
Last Election5:Did not run
Seats5:6
Seat Change5: 6
Popular Vote5:140,769
Percentage5:5.1%
Swing5: 5.1%
Map Size:250px
Minister-President
Before Election:Roland Koch
Before Party:Christian Democratic Union of Germany
After Election:Roland Koch
After Party:Christian Democratic Union of Germany

The 2008 Hessian state election was held on 27 January 2008 to elect the members of the Landtag of Hesse. The incumbent Christian Democratic Union (CDU) government led by Minister-President Roland Koch lost its majority. The result of the election was extremely close but inconclusive, with the CDU winning just 3,500 votes (0.1%) more than the Social Democratic Party (SPD). Due to the entrance of The Left to the Landtag, neither the CDU–FDP or SPD–Green bloc garnered a majority. After a year of failed attempts to form government, a new election was held.

Background and issues

The CDU won a majority in the 2003 state election, but lost popularity in the following years. In the 2008 election campaign, CDU Minister-President Roland Koch took a tough stance against immigrant youth violence as an electoral tactic.[1] The political left criticised this as xenophobic. Other issues included minimum wage concerns, education, and controversy over the planned major expansion of the Rhine-Main airport.

The formation of The Left meant that a party to the left of the SPD and Greens stood a serious chance of entering the Landtag for the first time in decades. The party polled between 4 and 6 per cent in the lead-up to the election; it was unclear if the party would exceed the 5% threshold.

Polling data narrowed as the election approached; both the CDU and SPD and their junior partners the FDP and Greens were essentially tied. This meant that, if The Left entered the Landtag, it may hold the balance of power and make government formation difficult.

Parties

The table below lists parties represented in the previous Landtag of Hesse.

NameIdeologyLeader(s)2003 result
Votes (%)Seats
bgcolor= CDUChristian Democratic Union of Germany
Christian democracyRoland Koch48.8%
bgcolor= SPDSocial Democratic Party of Germany
Social democracyAndrea Ypsilanti29.1%
bgcolor= GrüneAlliance 90/The Greens
Green politicsTarek Al-Wazir10.1%
bgcolor= FDPFree Democratic Party
Classical liberalismJörg-Uwe Hahn7.9%

Opinion polling

Polling firmFieldwork dateSample
size
CDUSPDGrüneFDPLinkeOthersLead
2008 state electiondata-sort-value="2008-01-27"27 January 200836.836.77.59.45.13.40.1
AMR Düsseldorfdata-sort-value="2008-01-25"23–24 Jan 20081,00037387105?1
Forsadata-sort-value="2008-01-25"22–24 Jan 20081,00638–3937–386–79–104–53–41
Forsadata-sort-value="2008-01-22"14–18 Jan 20081,00538387953data-sort-value="0"Tie
Forschungsgruppe Wahlendata-sort-value="2008-01-18"14–17 Jan 20081,100383788541
GMSdata-sort-value="2008-01-18"15–16 Jan 20081,010393489555
Infratest dimapdata-sort-value="2008-01-17"14–16 Jan 20081,000383778631
Forschungsgruppe Wahlendata-sort-value="2008-01-11"7–9 Jan 20081,0004036785?4
Infratest dimapdata-sort-value="2008-01-09"3–8 Jan 20081,000403599435
Emniddata-sort-value="2008-01-05"10 Dec–2 Jan 200880042321085310
AMR Düsseldorfdata-sort-value="2007-12-29"29 Dec 20071,0004033109627
Forsadata-sort-value="2007-12-12"3–7 Dec 20071,00241301195411
Forschungsgruppe Wahlendata-sort-value="2007-12-07"3–5 Dec 20071,052403497646
Forsadata-sort-value="2007-09-26"18–21 Sep 20071,0014330985513
Infratest dimapdata-sort-value="2007-09-06"3–5 Sep 20071,00042321084410
TNS Infratestdata-sort-value="2007-07-24"9–11 Jul 20071,0004033117547
Forsadata-sort-value="2007-06-28"11–26 Jun 20071,01241271196614
Emniddata-sort-value="2007-05-20"30 Apr–16 May 20075994032119448
Infratest dimapdata-sort-value="2007-03-24"19–21 Mar 20071,0013834109454
Forsadata-sort-value="2007-03-14"26 Feb–13 Mar 20071,02743271194616
Forsadata-sort-value="2006-12-14"20 Nov–12 Dec 20061,02342271095715
Forsadata-sort-value="2006-10-12"14 Sep–11 Oct 20061,170412712113614
Forsadata-sort-value="2006-06-15"15 May–9 Jun 20061,2253931119558
Infratest dimapdata-sort-value="2006-03-19"10–15 Mar 20061,0024035107444
Infratest dimapdata-sort-value="2003-10-19"19 Oct 20031,0005228115424
2003 state electiondata-sort-value="2003-02-02"2 February 200348.829.110.17.93.419.7

Election result

|-! rowspan=2 colspan=2| Party! colspan=3| Constituency! colspan=4| Party list! rowspan=2| Total
seats! rowspan=2| +/-|-! Votes! %! Seats ! Votes! %! +/-! Seats|-| bgcolor=| | align=left| Christian Democratic Union (CDU)| 1,068,358| 39.13| 28| 1,009,775| 36.81| 11.96| 14| 42| 14|-| bgcolor=| | align=left| Social Democratic Party (SPD)| 1,047,051| 38.35| 27| 1,006,264| 36.69| 7.60| 15| 42| 9|-| bgcolor=| | align=left| Free Democratic Party (FDP)| 196,004| 7.18| 0| 258,550| 9.43| 1.52| 11| 11| 2|-| bgcolor=| | align=left| Alliance 90/The Greens (GRÜNE)| 206,250| 7.55| 0| 205,610| 7.53| 2.57| 9| 9| 3|-| bgcolor=| | align=left| The Left (DIE LINKE)| 106,975| 3.92| 0| 140,769| 5.13| New| 6| 6| New|-! colspan="11" ||-| bgcolor=| | align=left| The Republicans (REP)| 39,126| 1.43| 0| 27,724| 1.01| 0.25| 0| 0| 0|-| bgcolor=| | align=left| Free Voters (FW)| 36,212| 1.33| 0| 24,327| 0.89| New| 0| 0| New|-| bgcolor=| | align=left| National Democratic Party (NPD)| 17,627| 0.65| 0| 24,004| 0.88| New| 0| 0| New|-| bgcolor=| | align=left| Human Environment Animal Protection Party (Tierschutz)| 8,833| 0.32| 0| 15,909| 0.58| 0.17| 0| 0| 0|-| bgcolor=| | align=left| Family Party (FAMILIE)| 1,243| 0.05| 0| 7,817| 0.28| New| 0| 0| New|-| bgcolor=| | align=left| Pirate Party (PIRATEN)| colspan=3| –| 6,962| 0.25| New| 0| 0| New|-| bgcolor=| | align=left| The Grays – Gray Panthers (GRAUE)| 717| 0.03| 0| 4,810| 0.18| New| 0| 0| New|-| | align=left| Alliance for Germany (Volksabstimmung)| 238| 0.01| 0| 3,130| 0.11| New| 0| 0| New|-| bgcolor=| | align=left| The Violets (VIOLETTEN)| colspan=3| –| 2,380| 0.09| New| 0| 0| New|-| | align=left| Independent Citizen Politics (UB)| 595| 0.02| 0| 1,775| 0.06| New| 0| 0| New|-| bgcolor=| | align=left| Civil Rights Movement Soliarity (BüSo)| 361| 0.01| 0| 1,118| 0.04| 0.02| 0| 0| 0|-| bgcolor=| | align=left| Socialist Equality Party (PSG)| colspan=3| –| 1,035| 0.04| 0.01| 0| 0| 0|-| bgcolor=| | align=left| Independents| 595| 0.02| 0| colspan=4| –| 0| 0|-! colspan=2| Total! 2,730,185! 100.00! 55! 2,742,599! 100.00! ! 55! 110! 0|-| colspan=2 align=center| Invalid| 80,888| 2.88| | 68,114| 2.42| colspan=4| |-! colspan=2| Turnout! 2,811,073! 64.32! ! 2,811,073! 64.32! 0.30! colspan=4| |-| colspan=2 align=center| Registered voters| 4,370,463| colspan=2| | 4,370,463| colspan=5| |}

Outcome

The CDU's share of the vote fell to its lowest level since the 1966 election. The SPD, under its leader Andrea Ypsilanti, increased its share of the vote substantially, from 29% to 37%; the SPD claimed victory as a result. The other winner was The Left, who narrowly entered the Hesse Landtag with 5.1% of the vote. This was the second western state legislature which the party had entered, the first being Bremen in 2007. The party also won seats in neighbouring Lower Saxony in an election held the same day.

The SPD and the CDU both won 42 seats; the FDP won 11 and the Greens 9. With 56 seats needed for a majority, neither was able to form a government with their traditional partners. There was a several-month-long lull after the election. The Left was thus kingmaker, exactly the result it had hoped for.[2]

A traffic light coalition (SPD, FDP, Greens) would have held a majority (62), but was rejected by FDP, saying that they will only form a coalition with CDU or go into opposition.[3]

SPD leader Ypsilanti had long refused to negotiate with The Left, but in October 2008 began talks to include them in a three-party "red-green-red" coalition with herself as Minister-President. This was a controversial move which sparked a revolt in the SPD, as many members bitterly refused to participate in power-sharing with The Left. One day before the election for Minister-President in the Landtag, four members of the SPD parliamentary group indicated they would not vote for her, and called a vote of no-confidence on her leadership.[4] After this point, it became clear a red-red-green coalition was not viable. New elections were subsequently scheduled for January 2009.

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Kölner Stadt-Anzeiger - Aktuelle Nachrichten aus Köln und der ganzen Welt.
  2. https://www.derwesten.de/nachrichten/2008/1/28/news-19224423/detail.html
  3. News: 2008-03-04 . Hessen: Ypsilanti will sich mit linken Stimmen wählen lassen - CDU tobt wegen Wortbruchs . de . Der Spiegel . 2023-03-21 . 2195-1349.
  4. Web site: Hessen: Ypsilanti Wahl geplatzt : News & Nachrichten . 2009-02-09 . 2008-12-06 . https://web.archive.org/web/20081206162731/http://www.die-topnews.de/hessen-ypsilanti-wahl-geplatzt-324302 . dead .