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Germany begins new parliamentary era

  • October 26, 2021

A light-hearted, first-schoolday atmosphere settled inside the historic Reichstag building in Berlin on Tuesday, as Germany’s 20th legislative period began with a five-hour session in the Bundestag. 

Chancellor Angela Merkel was present, but watching from an unfamiliar vantage point: The spectators’ gallery, alongside Germany’s head of state, President Frank-Walter Steinmeier. Though she remains in office, Merkel’s normal seat at the front of the government benches was empty — waiting to be filled by a successor currently being negotiated in the ongoing coalition talks.

The morning session was led by outgoing Bundestag President Wolfgang Schäuble (formally the second-highest office in the country, after the federal president), who held a much-anticipated valedictory speech.

“If we want to strengthen the principle of representation,” he told the delegates, “then we must continually work toward the big, controversial debates. The parliament is always also a political stage, and not just a formal event to work through coalition contracts. The parliament is the space where the diversity of opinions can openly be aired.”

“This is all the more important since it seems in our society that the readiness to tolerate opposing opinions, to allow contradictions, is declining,” he added.

Schäuble, by far the longest serving member with almost half a century of Bundestag experience, also had a few words for the 279 new faces in the chamber. “Extraordinarily fulfilling work is waiting for you, and at the same time a strenuous and all-consuming time, for all the political elan,” he said. “This requires work on a public stage.”

  • Bundestag: Faces of the German parliament

    A younger parliament

    On average, the 736 members of the new Bundestag are significantly younger than their predecessors. The youngest of all is 23-year-old Emilia Fester of the Green Party. In total, 47 members of parliament are younger than 30.

  • Bundestag: Faces of the German parliament

    Prototype politician

    “Mr. Typical” among the new members of the Bundestag is Michael Brand of the center-right Christian Democrat Union (CDU). At 47, he is the average age of all parliamentarians. He’s a trained lawyer, which is among the most popular career paths chosen by Germany’s politicians. And: his first name Michael is the most common in the German parliament.

  • Bundestag: Faces of the German parliament

    Elder politicians

    The oldest politician in Germany’s new parliament is 80-year-old Alexander Gauland of the populist far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD). The longest-serving member of the body is CDU stalwart Wolfgang Schäuble, who will have the honor of opening the first session of the new parliament.

  • Bundestag: Faces of the German parliament

    Gender diversity

    The number of women in the Bundestag is up by 4%, with the biggest increase made by the socialist Left Party and the Greens. But it is painfully slow progress towards real parity. Green Party parliamentarians Tessa Ganserer (44) und Nyke Slawik (27) are the first transgender women elected to Germany’s Bundestag.” Our success story is going out around the world,” Slawik tweeted.

  • Bundestag: Faces of the German parliament

    A history of migration

    Some 83 parliamentarians have their roots in migrant communities, that is especially true of the Left Party and the Social Democrats. The SPD’s Rasha Nasr (29) is of special note. Born in Dresden after her parents left Syria to begin a new life in communist East Germany, she now represents the eastern German state of Saxony.

  • Bundestag: Faces of the German parliament

    Afro-German representation

    Armand Zorn is one of the parliamentarians representing the increasingly prominent Afro-German community. The Social Democrat (SPD) was born in Cameroon and arrived in Germany as a 12-year-old. In the September election he managed to win a direct constituency seat. “That shows that our society is diverse. And it doesn’t matter where you come from, but where you are going,” he said.

  • Bundestag: Faces of the German parliament

    Majority are academics

    Most parliamentarians have a university education. By contrast, very few have gone through vocational training. Gülistan Yüksel (59) of the Social Democratic Party (SPD) is among those who have. The daughter of a so-called “guest worker” who arrived in Germany from Turkey in the early 1970s, she trained as a pharmacy assistant. She was first elected to the Bundestag in 2013.

  • Bundestag: Faces of the German parliament

    Business background

    Germany’s small business owners are underrepresented in parliament, where they account for just 51 members. Many of them belong to the Free Democrats (FDP), which is viewed as pro-business. Kristine Lütke is one of them. The 38-year-old took over the management of a care home for the elderly from her parents.

  • Bundestag: Faces of the German parliament

    Health experts lacking

    The COVID pandemic has provided a painful reminder of the importance of the health sector but it remains seriously underrepresented in parliament, where there are just a handful of doctors and other health care professionals. Above, 34-year-old Stephan Pilsinger of the Bavarian Christian Social Union (CSU) is a qualified doctor.

    Author: Lisa Hänel


A diverse parliament

Some 27 new seats had to be fitted into the chamber in the month since the election, with a total of 736 parliamentarians — a new high — now to be accommodated.

The new parliament is also younger and more diverse, though it still cannot be said to reflect the German population. With an average age of 47.5, this is the youngest Bundestag in decades, while some 35% of the parliamentarians are female, a higher proportion than the last parliament, though not a higher than the one before.

Around 11% of the members are of immigrant background, the highest proportion ever, but still lower than the nearly 27% in the German population.

Fittingly, Tuesday’s agenda included the dawn of an era: The election of a new Bundestag president. The winner, with 576 votes to 90, was the well-regarded Social Democrat nominee Bärbel Bas, a health policy specialist and only the third woman ever to take the office.  

“I see my election as a change in the times,” she said in her opening speech, before chairing the remainder of the sitting. “It does our country good for citizens to see a woman taking responsibility in the heart of our democracy. I am the third woman (to take this post) since 1949 — that is not a glorious sign.”

Wrangling with the far-right

The morning session began with an intervention from the far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD), which demanded that the session be led, as tradition dictates, by the oldest Bundestag member — their very own former parliamentary leader, 80-year-old Alexander Gauland. The motion was, as expected, overwhelmingly voted down by the other parties. 

But the wrangling with the AfD dominated the opening session, as the delegates debated who would be elected parliamentary vice presidents. Here too, the AfD feels its right to appoint a vice president is being over-ridden by the other parties.

In a packed chamber, a handful of parliamentarians, almost all AfD, were forced to join the debate from a separate gallery reserved for members who refused to disclose their vaccine status. 

Meanwhile, Germany’s two center-right parties engaged in a minor power-play over who would have to sit next to the AfD in the next legislative period.

Until now, the Free Democratic Party (FDP) has occupied the seats just to the left of the AfD, but with its new ambitions to government power (the party is engaged in coalition talks with the SPD and the Greens), the FDP is still hoping to shunt the Christian Democrats (CDU) over to the right so it could move its group into the center. So far, the conservative CDU, likely to be the largest opposition party in this parliament, has successfully resisted the move.

The Bundestag is the biggest parliament in Europe, and, after the National People’s Congress in China, the second-largest in the world.

This article will be expanded to reflect the day’s events.

While you’re here: Every Tuesday, DW editors round up what is happening in German politics and society, with an eye toward understanding this year’s elections and beyond. You can sign up here for the weekly email newsletter Berlin Briefing, to stay on top of developments as Germany enters the post-Merkel era.


Article source: https://www.dw.com/en/germany-begins-new-parliamentary-era/a-59626756?maca=en-rss-en-ger-1023-xml-atom

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