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1957 West German federal election

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FieldValue
countryWest Germany
typeparliamentary
previous_election1953 West German federal election
previous_year1953
election_date
next_election1961 West German federal election
next_year1961
outgoing_membersList of members of the 2nd Bundestag
elected_membersList of members of the 3rd Bundestag
seats_for_electionAll 497 seats in the Bundestag
majority_seats249
registered35,400,923 ( 6.9%)
turnout87.8% ( 1.8pp)
image1
candidate1Konrad Adenauer
party1CDU/CSU
last_election145.2%, 243 seats
seats1**270**
seat_change127
popular_vote1**15,008,399**
percentage1**50.2%**
swing15.0 pp
image2
candidate2Erich Ollenhauer
party2Social Democratic Party of Germany
last_election228.8%, 151 seats
seats2169
seat_change218
popular_vote29,495,571
percentage231.8%
swing23.0 pp
image4
candidate4Reinhold Maier
party4Free Democratic Party (Germany)
last_election49.5%, 48 seats
seats441
seat_change47
popular_vote42,307,135
percentage47.7%
swing41.8 pp
image5candidate5 = Heinrich Hellwege
party5German Party (1947)
last_election53.3%, 15 seats
seats517
seat_change52
popular_vote51,007,282
percentage53.4%
swing50.1 pp
map_image1957 West German federal election.svg
map_size325px
map_captionThe left side shows constituency winners of the election by their party colours. The right side shows party list winners of the election for the additional members by their party colours.
titleGovernment
before_electionSecond Adenauer cabinet
before_partyCDU/CSU–FDP–DP
posttitleGovernment after election
after_electionThird Adenauer cabinet
after_partyCDU/CSU–DP

A federal election was held in West Germany on 15 September 1957 to elect the members of the third Bundestag. The Christian Democratic Union and its longtime ally, the Christian Social Union in Bavaria, won a sweeping victory, taking 270 seats in the Bundestag to win the first–and, to date, only–absolute majority for a single German parliamentary group in a free election.

This was the first West German federal election to take place in the Saarland, which–as Saar protectorate–had been a separate entity under French control between 1946 and 1956.

Only four parties won seats in the 1957 election, which was a consolidation of the party system relative to the 1953 and 1949 elections where six and ten parties won seats respectively. As the CDU/CSU won a majority of seats, it formed a government without coalition partners.

Campaign

Economy

Federal Chancellor Konrad Adenauer had some solid advantages over his Social Democratic Party (SPD) opponent, Erich Ollenhauer; West Germany had become fully sovereign in 1955 and The Law on Pension Reform (backdated to 1 January 1957) was enormously popular when passed in the spring of 1957, while the economy had been growing on average 7% per year since 1953 in part due to young, skilled and highly educated workers immigrating from East Germany keeping productivity high and earnings growth low. West Germany had joined the European Economic Community in March 1957. Its economy was growing steadily with very low unemployment, and most West Germans felt more prosperous and more secure than in 1949 or 1953.

Defence

Although Adenauer had said that he would confine the Bundeswehr to conventional weapons, on 5 April he said "Tactical atomic weapons are nothing but the further development of artillery... it goes without saying that... we cannot dispense with having them for our troops... we must follow suit and have these new types – they are, after all, practically normal weapons." On 12 April eighteen physicists from the Max Planck Institute released the Göttingen Manifesto calling on West Germany to not produce, test or use nuclear weapons. Adenauer at first tried to brush the matter aside, but under heavy criticism from the press decided instead to meet with five of the physicists in Bonn. After a seven-hour meeting a joint communique was issued saying "The Federal Republic will not produce its own nuclear weapons, and consequently the Federal Government has no reason to approach German nuclear scientists about their participation in the development of nuclear weapons." The row continued, having been fuelled by an aggressive note from the Soviet Union in April and ended at the NATO Spring conference in May. Ultimately the row was too far away from the election itself to damage a surprisingly healthy looking Adenauer's prospects.

Results

The All-German Bloc lost all of their seats, but the ideologically similar German Party maintained theirs. The 1957 election was the last time that a right-wing populist party would return members to the Bundestag until Alternative for Germany's entrance in 2017. The election also marked the last time until 1990 that any party other than CDU/CSU or SPD won any constituency seats.

Results by state

Constituency seats

StateTotal
seatsSeats wonCDUCSUSPDDPFDPChristian Democratic Union of Germany}};"Christian Social Union in Bavaria}};"Social Democratic Party of Germany}};"German Party (1947)}};"Free Democratic Party (Germany)}};"Baden-Württemberg33Bavaria47Bremen3Hamburg8Hesse22Lower Saxony34North Rhine-Westphalia66Rhineland-Palatinate15Saarland5Schleswig-Holstein14Total247147474661
321
47
3
17
11101
2185
5313
123
311
14

List seats

StateTotal
seatsSeats wonSPDCDUFDPDPCSUSocial Democratic Party of Germany}};"Christian Democratic Union of Germany}};"Free Democratic Party (Germany)}};"German Party (1947)}};"Christian Social Union in Bavaria}};"Baden-Württemberg34Bavaria35Bremen3Hamburg11Hesse24Lower Saxony27North Rhine-Westphalia88Rhineland-Palatinate16Saarland3Schleswig-Holstein9Total2501236840118
175111
2546
21
2621
9942
14643
4134112
763
12
711

Aftermath

Konrad Adenauer led the CDU-CSU coalition to a landslide victory. The CDU-CSU won an outright majority— the only to date. Since the CDU and the CSU form a single bloc in the Bundestag, this is the only time that a political party in Germany has been elected to a majority government in a free election.

Notes

References

References

  1. Barnes, Samuel H.. (1962). "The German Party System and the 1961 Federal Election". American Political Science Review.
  2. Charles Williams (2000) ''Adenauer: The Father of the New Germany'', pp442–445
  3. Erling Bjöl, Grimberg's History of the Nations, volume 23: The Rich West, "A Giant Dwarf: West Germany," Helsinki: WSOY, 1985
  4. Dennis L. Bark and David R. Gress, A History of West Germany, volume 1: 1945–1963: From Shadow to Substance, London, UK: Basil Blackwell, 1989
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