Second Bouffier cabinet explained

Cabinet Name:Second Cabinet of Volker Bouffier
Cabinet Number:21st
Cabinet Type:Cabinet
Jurisdiction:Hesse
Flag:Coat of arms of Hesse.svg
Flag Border:true
Incumbent:18 January 2014 – 17 January 2019
Date Formed:18 January 2014
Date Dissolved:17 January 2019
Government Head Title:Minister-President
Government Head:Volker Bouffier
Deputy Government Head Title:Deputy Minister-President
Deputy Government Head:Tarek Al-Wazir
Members Number:10
Political Parties:Christian Democratic Union
Alliance 90/The Greens
Legislature Status:Coalition government
Opposition Parties:Social Democratic Party
The Left
Free Democratic Party
Election:2013 Hessian state election
Legislature Term:19th Landtag of Hesse
Predecessor:First Bouffier cabinet
Successor:Third Bouffier cabinet

The Second Bouffier cabinet was the state government of Hesse between 2014 and 2019, sworn in on 18 January 2014 after Volker Bouffier was elected as Minister-President of Hesse by the members of the Landtag of Hesse. It was the 21st Cabinet of Hesse.

It was formed after the 2013 Hessian state election by the Christian Democratic Union (CDU) and Alliance 90/The Greens (GRÜNE). Excluding the Minister-President, the cabinet comprised ten ministers. Eight were members of the CDU and two were members of the Greens.

The second Bouffier cabinet was succeeded by the third Bouffier cabinet on 18 January 2019.

Formation

See also: 2013 Hessian state election. The previous cabinet was a coalition government of the CDU and Free Democratic Party (FDP) led by Minister-President Volker Bouffier of the CDU.

The election took place on 22 September 2013, and resulted in major losses for the FDP and a slight improvement for the CDU. The opposition SPD achieved significant gains, while the Greens declined and The Left remained steady.

Overall, the incumbent coalition lost its majority. The opposition coalition of the SPD and Greens also fell short of a majority, leaving no clear path to government for either major party. Options included a grand coalition of the CDU and SPD, an SPD–Green–Left coalition, and a CDU–Green coalition. A traffic light coalition of the SPD, Greens, and FDP also held a majority, but was ruled out by the FDP. The SPD and Greens both announced plans to hold exploratory talks with all other parties and stated they were open to all options. The Left stated they would be willing to provide external support to a minority government of the SPD and Greens.[1]

The first round of talks between the CDU and SPD were inconclusive.[2] After meeting on 8 October, the CDU and Greens spoke positively and scheduled a second round for the following week.[3] On the 15th, Bouffier and Green leader Tarek Al-Wazir stated that, despite differences, a coalition between their parties could be possible. They organised a third meeting for two weeks later.[4] Meanwhile, opinion polling indicated that two-thirds of voters preferred a coalition between the CDU and SPD.[5]

At the same time, the SPD and Greens held joint talks with The Left. Though they found common ground on education, energy, and labour, they encountered difficulties over finance policy and proposed expansions to Frankfurt Airport. They were also troubled by public spats between party leaders, with Janine Wissler accusing the SPD of sabotaging a potential coalition after the 2008 Hessian state election and federal SPD chairman Sigmar Gabriel describing The Left as "crazies".[6] The Greens and later SPD rejected The Left's proposal for a minority government, leaving a formal coalition as the only option.[7]

By mid-November, the CDU and Greens continued to give optimistic signs,[8] while talks had stalled between the three left-wing parties;[9] SPD leader Thorsten Schäfer-Gümbel was rumoured to have declared negotiations with The Left a failure.[10] Exploratory discussions also continued between the SPD and CDU, finding common ground in areas like finance policy, although both parties described a grand coalition as a last resort.[11] Talks concluded indecisively on the 18th.[12]

On 22 November, Volker Bouffier announced that the CDU intended to offer coalition negotiations to the Greens.[13] The next day, the Greens congress voted to accept.[14] The CDU and Greens presented their coalition contract on 18 December.[15] It was approved by both parties' congresses on the 21st, with the Greens voting 74% in support and the CDU near-unanimously, and officially signed on 23 December.[16]

Bouffier was elected Minister-President by the Landtag on 18 January 2014, though the initial ballot was invalidated because of an administrative error: the generic placeholder name Max Mustermann was printed on some of the ballots instead of Volker Bouffier's name, causing the vote to be re-taken. In the re-vote, Bouffier was elected with 62 votes out of 109 cast.[17]

Composition

The composition of the cabinet at the time of its dissolution was as follows:

PortfolioMinisterPartyTook officeLeft officeState secretaries
Minister-PresidentVolker Bouffier
bgcolor=CDU18 January 201417 January 2019
Deputy Minister-President
Minister for Economics, Energy, Transport and State Development
Tarek Al-Wazir
bgcolor=GRÜNE18 January 201417 January 2019
Minister for Interior and SportPeter Beuth
bgcolor=CDU18 January 201417 January 2019
Minister for FinanceThomas Schäfer
bgcolor=CDU18 January 201417 January 2019
Minister for JusticeEva Kühne-Hörmann
bgcolor=CDU18 January 201417 January 2019
Minister for Social Affairs and IntegrationStefan Grüttner
bgcolor=CDU18 January 201417 January 2019
Minister for EducationRalph Alexander Lorz
bgcolor=CDU18 January 201417 January 2019
Minister for Science and ArtBoris Rhein
bgcolor=CDU18 January 201417 January 2019
Minister for Environment, Climate Protection, Agricultural Economics and Consumer ProtectionPriska Hinz
bgcolor=GRÜNE18 January 201417 January 2019
Head of the State ChancelleryAxel Wintermeyer
bgcolor=CDU18 January 201417 January 2019
Minister for Federal Affairs and EuropeLucia Puttrich
bgcolor=CDU18 January 201417 January 2019

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Hesse: SPD and Greens open to all options. 28 September 2013. de. Merkur.
  2. Web site: There is a long way to go between the CDU and SPD. 2 October 2013. de. Tagesspiegel.
  3. Web site: CDU and Greens agree on further exploration. 8 October 2013. de. Wirtschaftswoche.
  4. Web site: Black-green negotiations in Hesse are entering the third round. 15 October 2013. de. Der Spiegel.
  5. Web site: After the state election everything is still open. 24 October 2013. de. Offenbach-Post Online.
  6. Web site: Catfight in Hessian exploratory talks. 25 October 2013. de. Die Welt.
  7. Web site: Hesse SPD excludes minority government. 18 November 2013. de. Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung.
  8. Web site: CDU and Greens are getting closer. 12 November 2013. de. Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung.
  9. Web site: Reds and Green do not find each other in Hesse. 1 November 2013. de. Die Zeit.
  10. Web site: Speculation about the end of red-red-green. 14 November 2013. de. Die Tageszeitung.
  11. Web site: The SPD and CDU are getting closer to each other on financial policy. 7 November 2013. de. Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung.
  12. Web site: Exploratory talks between CDU and SPD in Hesse concluded. 18 November 2013. de. Report K.
  13. Web site: Bouffier chooses the Greens. 22 November 2013. de. Die Zeit.
  14. Web site: Greens vote for coalition negotiations with CDU. 23 November 2013. de. Die Zeit.
  15. Web site: Black-green coalition agreement in Hesse: Unanimously on education, the debt brake and the airport. 18 December 2013. de. Süddeutsche Zeitung.
  16. Web site: Black-green coalition agreement signed. 23 December 2013. de. Wirtschaftswoche.
  17. Web site: The CDU politician Volker Bouffier has been re-elected Minister-President. 18 January 2014. de. Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung.