From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base
1890 German federal election
none
none
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| country | German Empire |
| type | parliamentary |
| previous_election | 1887 German federal election |
| previous_year | 1887 |
| election_date | |
| next_election | 1893 German federal election |
| next_year | 1893 |
| seats_for_election | All 397 seats in the Reichstag |
| majority_seats | 199 |
| registered | 10,145,402 |
| turnout | 71.58% ( 5.91pp) |
| image_size | 130x130px |
| image1 | |
| leader1 | Ludwig Windthorst |
| party1 | Centre Party (Germany) |
| last_election1 | 19.91%, 98 seats |
| seats1 | **107** |
| seat_change1 | 9 |
| popular_vote1 | |
| percentage1 | 18.55% |
| swing1 | 1.36 pp |
| image2 | |
| leader2 | Otto von Helldorff |
| party2 | German Conservative Party |
| last_election2 | 15.21%, 80 seats |
| seats2 | 71 |
| seat_change2 | 9 |
| popular_vote2 | |
| percentage2 | 12.21% |
| swing2 | 3.00 pp |
| image3 | |
| leader3 | Rudolf Virchow |
| party3 | German Free-minded Party |
| last_election3 | 12.62%, 32 seats |
| seats3 | 67 |
| seat_change3 | 35 |
| popular_vote3 | |
| percentage3 | 15.89% |
| swing3 | 3.27 pp |
| image4 | |
| leader4 | Rudolf von Bennigsen |
| party4 | NLP |
| last_election4 | 21.90%, 98 seats |
| seats4 | 38 |
| seat_change4 | 60 |
| popular_vote4 | |
| percentage4 | 15.64% |
| image5 | |
| leader5 | Paul Singer |
| Alwin Gerisch | |
| party5 | Social Democratic Party of Germany |
| last_election5 | 10.12%, 11 seats |
| seats5 | 35 |
| seat_change5 | 24 |
| popular_vote5 | **** |
| percentage5 | **19.75%** |
| swing5 | 9.63 pp |
| image6 | |
| leader6 | Viktor I, Duke of Ratibor |
| party6 | Free Conservative Party |
| last_election6 | 9.77%, 41 seats |
| seats6 | 19 |
| seat_change6 | 22 |
| popular_vote6 | |
| percentage6 | 6.38% |
| swing6 | 3.39 pp |
| map_image | Karte der Reichstagswahlen 1890.svg |
| map_size | 400px |
| map_caption | Results by constituency |
| title | President of the Reichstag |
| before_election | Albert von Levetzow |
| before_party | German Conservative Party |
| posttitle | President of the Reichstag after election |
| after_election | Albert von Levetzow |
| after_party | German Conservative Party |
| swing4 | 6.26 pp |
Alwin Gerisch
Federal elections were held in Germany on 20 February 1890. The Centre Party regained its position as the largest party in the Reichstag by winning 107 of the 397 seats, whilst the National Liberal Party, formerly the largest party, was reduced to 38 seats.
Contemporaries remarked on the striking increase in the vote share of the Social Democratic Party. However, despite receiving the most votes, the Social Democratic Party won only 35 seats. Voter turnout was 71.5%.
Campaign
This was the first general election during the reign of Emperor Wilhelm II. As such, it was marked by the conflict between the new Emperor, who unlike his grandfather Wilhelm I involved himself in day-to-day politics, and Chancellor Otto von Bismarck. At this time, the Emperor's primary concern was improving relations with the working classes. At the beginning of February, opposed by Bismarck who viewed it as a concession to the Social Democrats, Wilhelm II introduced labour protection legislation. Bismarck's attempt to make the Anti-Socialist Laws permanent had already been defeated in the Reichstag on 25 January. This failure was the result of divisions within the (German Conservatives, Free Conservatives and National Liberals) otherwise supporting Bismarck, which was in turn because the Emperor had let it be known that he opposed extending the laws.
The election became a catastrophic defeat for the "Cartel", which lost 85 seats, and a victory for the Social Democrats. The latter nearly doubled their vote share compared to the 1887 elections, reaching 19.7% of the vote (around 1.4 million votes) and winning the popular vote for the first time. From his London exile, Friedrich Engels euphorically proclaimed the day of polling “the day the German Revolution began”. However, because of the malapportioned constituencies, which greatly underrepresented densely populated areas, and the fact that Social Democratic candidates often faced a united front of non-socialist parties in runoffs, they only won 35 seats. These included the major cities of Königsberg, Bremen, Hannover, Magdeburg, Frankfurt am Main, Mannheim, Nuremberg and Munich. All three Hamburg seats, two of the six Berlin seats and one of the two Breslau seats were also won by the party. Later that same year, the Anti-Socialist Laws were finally repealed, and the party renamed itself the SPD.
The Centre Party remained the strongest party, winning 106 constituencies (27.2% of seats) with 18.6% of the popular vote. The left-liberal parties also made significant gains in votes and representation. For the first time, members of German parties won seats in a few Alsace-Lorraine constituencies. Regionalists could, however, make gains elsewhere off the decline of the Cartel parties. The Antisemites gained only 0.7% of the votes, but won five constituencies. Their strongholds were the Grand Duchy of Hesse and Hesse-Nassau.
One month after the elections, Bismarck was dismissed from office. His successor, Leo von Caprivi, governed with the support of the Cartel parties and the Centre. The 8th Reichstag, theoretically the first to be elected for a five-year term – the extension from three to five years had been passed on the 18th of March 1888 – was however dissolved in 1893.
Results
Alsace-Lorraine
References
References
- [[Dieter Nohlen]] & Philip Stöver (2010) ''Elections in Europe: A data handbook'', p762 {{ISBN. 978-3-8329-5609-7
- Dunning, Wm. A.. (1890). "Record of Political Events". Political Science Quarterly.
- Nohlen & Stöver, p789
- Nohlen & Stöver, p774
- [https://wahlen-in-deutschland.de/krtw.htm Wahlen in Deutschland]
- [https://wahlen-in-deutschland.de/kuRlElsass.htm Wahlen in Deutschland]
This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.
Ask Mako anything about 1890 German federal election — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.
Research with MakoFree with your Surf account
Create a free account to save articles, ask Mako questions, and organize your research.
Sign up freeThis content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.
Report