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1887 German federal election

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FieldValue
election_name1887 German federal election
countryGerman Empire
typeparliamentary
ongoingno
previous_election1884 German federal election
previous_year1884
election_date
next_election1890 German federal election
next_year1890
seats_for_electionAll 397 seats in the Reichstag
majority_seats199
registered9,769,654 4.12%
turnout7,570,710 (77.49%) 16.94pp
image_size130x130px
image1
leader1Rudolf von Bennigsen
party1NLP
leader_since11867
last_election117.44%, 50 seats
seats1**98**
seat_change148
popular_vote1****
percentage1**21.90%**
swing14.46 pp
image2
leader2Ludwig Windthorst
party2Centre Party (Germany)
leader_since226 May 1874
last_election222.52%, 99 seats
seats298
seat_change21
popular_vote2
percentage219.91%
swing22.61 pp
image3
leader3Otto von Helldorff
party3German Conservative Party
leader_since37 June 1876
last_election315.16%, 78 seats
seats380
seat_change32
popular_vote3
percentage315.21%
swing30.05 pp
image4
leader4Viktor I, Duke of Ratibor
party4Free Conservative Party
last_election46.85%, 28 seats
seats441
seat_change413
popular_vote4
percentage49.77%
swing42.92 pp
image5
leader5Rudolf Virchow
party5German Free-minded Party
leader_since55 March 1884
last_election517.28%, 66 seats
seats532
seat_change534
popular_vote5
percentage512.62%
swing54.66 pp
image6**Polen**
party6Polish Party
last_election63.71%, 16 seats
seats613
seat_change63
popular_vote6
percentage63.02%
swing60.69 pp
map_imageFile:Karte der Reichstagswahlen 1887.svg
map_size400px
map_captionMap of results (by constituencies)
titlePresident of the Reichstag
before_electionWilhelm von Wedell-Piesdorf
posttitlePresident of the Reichstag after election
before_partyGerman Conservative Party
after_electionWilhelm von Wedell-Piesdorf
after_partyGerman Conservative Party

A federal election for the seventh Reichstag of the German Empire was held on 21 February 1887. It was an early election called after Chancellor Otto von Bismarck requested the dissolution of the Reichstag elected in October 1884 because it had refused to accept his seven-year military budget. He thought that a newly elected Reichstag would be more likely to pass the bill, and his hopes proved well-founded. The parties that supported him – the German Conservative Party, the German Reich Party and the National Liberals – gained 53 seats, enough to give them a 55% majority in the new Reichstag. It quickly passed the military budget.

Background

The 1887 election was the second during the German Empire to be held early (the first was in 1878). On 14 January 1887, at the request of Chancellor Otto von Bismarck, Emperor Wilhelm I dissolved the Reichstag elected in October 1884, ten months before its three-year term was due to expire. Bismarck took the step because the Reichstag, which lacked a clear majority bloc of any like-minded parties, had refused to pass his proposed seven-year military budget. In response to France's accelerated program for military training under Minister of War Georges Boulanger, it contained a 10 percent increase in the strength of the army. The Centre Party and German Free-minded Party, together with the National Liberal Party, German Conservative Party and German Reich Party, supported the increase in strength. The Centre and Free-minded parties, however, refused to accept the budget's seven-year term and insisted that it be limited to three years. Bismarck spoke twice in front of the Reichstag, supported the second time by 87-year-old Chief of the General Staff Helmuth von Moltke, without being able to sway the vote in his favor. He then abruptly presented an order to dissolve the Reichstag which the Emperor had already signed. Bismarck's hope was that a new Reichstag would be more favorable towards his plans.

Campaign

The campaign naturally centered around the military budget and whether the Reichstag or the emperor and the Reich government should be making the key decisions about the military. The German Conservative Party, German Reich Party and National Liberals formed a cartel In order to have as many pro-Bismarck candidates elected as possible. They sponsored joint candidates and made provisions for handling potential runoff elections. The National Liberal Party's appeal to the electorate stressed the need for a strong army to protect peace and security. It saw the lack of unity in the Reichstag as a grave threat to the still young nation:We make this appeal to all Germans ... whose hearts are concerned about the future of the Fatherland, who respect the security and independence of the newly established German Reich more than the ruthless assertion of factional programs, and who see in the struggle over the legal foundations of our German army ... a grave danger for a prosperous and progressive development within the country. ... We are confident that the German people will once again victoriously reject all temptations and enticements to relapse into the old disunity and internal strife under which we suffered and perished for centuries.

Electoral system

The election was held under general, equal, direct and secret suffrage. All German males over the age of 25 years were able to vote except for active members of the military and recipients of poor relief. The restrictions on the military were meant to keep it from becoming politicized, while men on relief were considered to be open to political manipulation. The constitutional guarantee of a secret vote was not safeguarded at the time, since ballot boxes and polling booths were not introduced until 1903.

If no candidate in a district won an absolute majority of the votes, a runoff election was held between the first and second place finishers. It was possible for a replacement candidate to be introduced in a runoff.

Results

The election was a clear victory for Bismarck. The three cartel parties picked up 53 additional seats for a total of 219 out of 397, giving them a 55% majority. The National Liberal Party jumped to first place in terms of votes won but was tied with the second place Centre Party in number of seats; both had 98. The German Free-minded Party and Social Democratic Party of Germany suffered the greatest losses of seats (34 and 13 respectively).

On 11 March 1887, just a few weeks after the election, the Reichstag approved Bismarck's military budget with the seven-year period he wanted.

Alsace-Lorraine

References

References

  1. (2010). "Elections in Europe: A Data Handbook". Nomos.
  2. Palmer, Alan. (1976). "Bismarck". Lume Books.
  3. Blume, Dorlis. (3 September 2014). "Chronik 1887".
  4. "9. Februar 1888: Reichstag verlängert Wahlperiode von drei auf fünf Jahre".
  5. (1913). ["Programmatische Kundgebungen der Nationalliberalen Partei, 1866–1913"]({{Google books). Reichsverlag.
  6. (21 March 2016). "21. März 1871 – Erster Reichstag konstituiert sich".
  7. Steinsdorfer, Helmut. (2000). ["Die Liberale Reichspartei (LRP) von 1871"]({{Google books). Steiner.
  8. [https://wahlen-in-deutschland.de/krtw.htm Wahlen in Deutschland]
  9. [https://wahlen-in-deutschland.de/kuRlElsass.htm Wahlen in Deutschland]
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