Skip to content
Surf Wiki
Save to docs
politics

From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base

1972 West German federal election

none

1972 West German federal election

none

FieldValue
countryWest Germany
typeparliamentary
previous_election1969 West German federal election
previous_year1969
outgoing_membersList of members of the 6th Bundestag
election_date
elected_membersList of members of the 7th Bundestag
next_election1976 West German federal election
next_year1976
seats_for_electionAll 496 seats in the Bundestag
majority_seats249
registered41,446,302 ( 7.2%)
turnout91.1% ( 4.4 pp)
image_upright1
image1
leader1Willy Brandt
party1Social Democratic Party of Germany
last_election142.7%, 224 seats
seats1**230**
seat_change16
popular_vote1**17,175,169**
percentage1**45.8%**
swing13.1 pp
image2
leader2Rainer Barzel
party2CDU/CSU
last_election246.1%, 242 seats
seats2225
seat_change217
popular_vote216,806,020
percentage244.9%
swing21.2 pp
image3
leader3Walter Scheel
party3Free Democratic Party (Germany)
last_election35.8%, 30 seats
seats341
seat_change311
popular_vote33,129,982
percentage38.4%
swing32.6 pp
map_image1972 West German federal election.svg
map_size400px
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_electionFirst Brandt cabinet
before_partySPD–FDP
posttitleGovernment after election
after_electionSecond Brandt cabinet
after_partySPD–FDP

A federal election was held in West Germany on 19 November 1972 to elect the members of the seventh Bundestag. In the first snap elections since the resumption of democratic elections in 1949, the Social Democratic Party (SPD) emerged as the largest party in parliament, winning 230 of the 496 seats. The SPD's Willy Brandt remained chancellor after resuming his coalition government with the Free Democratic Party.

Campaign

The Social-liberal coalition of SPD and FDP had lost its majority after several Bundestag MPs (like former FDP ministers Erich Mende and Heinz Starke or SPD partisan Herbert Hupka) had left their party and become members of the CDU/CSU opposition to protest against Chancellor Willy Brandt's Neue Ostpolitik, especially against the de facto recognition of the Oder-Neisse line by the 1970 Treaty of Warsaw.

Barzel in victory pose at a CDU election rally in [[Cologne

On 27 April 1972 the opposition had tried to have CDU leader Rainer Barzel elected new chancellor in a constructive vote of no confidence, but Barzel surprisingly missed the majority of 249 by two votes. Rumours that at least one member of the CDU/CSU faction had been paid by the East German Stasi to abstain (in effect, voting against Barzel) were confirmed by Markus Wolf, former head of the Hauptverwaltung Aufklärung, in 1997. Nevertheless, the following budget debates revealed that the government's majority was lost and only the upcoming organisation of the 1972 Summer Olympics in Munich delayed the arrangement of new elections. On 22 September 1972 Chancellor Brandt asked for a vote of confidence, which required the same majority of 249 "yes" votes: it failed with 233 "yes" votes to 246 "no" votes. The members of the government did not participate (in effect, voting no) to ensure the vote would fail, however it would have regardless. This allowed Brandt to advise President Gustav Heinemann to dissolve the Bundestag and call new elections the same day.

In the tense campaign, the CDU/CSU attacked Brandt as being too lenient towards Eastern Europe and having the wrong ideas on the economy. SPD and FDP benefited from the enormous personal popularity of the chancellor, laureate of the 1971 Nobel Peace Prize. He gained the support by numerous celebrities of the West German culture and media scene (e.g. Günter Grass), expressed by the slogan Willy wählen! ("Vote for Willy!").

Opinion polls

Polling firmFieldwork dateSample
sizeUnionSPDFDPNPDOthersAbstentionLeadCDU/CSU}};"Social Democratic Party of Germany}};"Free Democratic Party (Germany)}};"National Democratic Party of Germany}};"
1972 federal election19 Nov 197244.86**45.85**8.40.60.4*8.9*Social Democratic Party of Germany}};color:#FFFFFF;"0.99
[Allensbach](https://doi.org/10.2307/446436)1–7 Nov 1972?**46.5**45.76.11.7CDU/CSU}};color:#FFFFFF;" data-sort-value="-6"0.8
[Allensbach](https://doi.org/10.2307/446436)1–7 Oct 1972?45.0**46.0**6.03.0Social Democratic Party of Germany}};color:#FFFFFF;" data-sort-value="-6"1
[Emnid for SPIEGEL](https://www.spiegel.de/politik/zweidrittel-mehrheit-gegen-die-jusos-a-b4bbb349-0002-0001-0000-000043375899)Feb 1971N/A**39**33523CDU/CSU}};color:#FFFFFF;" data-sort-value="-6"6
1969 federal election19 Nov 1972**46.1**42.75.84.31.2*13.3*CDU/CSU}};color:#FFFFFF;" data-sort-value="-3.4"3.4

Results

Voter turnout was 91.1%, the highest ever since 1949. In 1970 the voting age had been lowered from 21 to 18.

The SPD celebrated their best result ever, representing the largest faction in the German parliament for the first time since the 1930 Reichstag elections. It enabled the party to nominate Annemarie Renger for President of the Bundestag; she was the first Social Democrat and also the first woman to hold this office.

Results by state

Constituency seats

StateTotal
seatsSeats wonSPDCDUCSUSocial Democratic Party of Germany}};"Christian Democratic Union of Germany}};"Christian Social Union in Bavaria}};"Baden-Württemberg36Bavaria44Bremen3Hamburg8Hesse22Lower Saxony30North Rhine-Westphalia73Rhineland-Palatinate16Saarland5Schleswig-Holstein11Total2481526531
1224
1331
3
8
202
237
5221
97
32
92

List seats

StateTotal
seatsSeats wonCDUSPDFDPCSUChristian Democratic Union of Germany}};"Social Democratic Party of Germany}};"Free Democratic Party (Germany)}};"Christian Social Union in Bavaria}};"Baden-Württemberg36Bavaria42Bremen1Hamburg8Hesse25Lower Saxony32North Rhine-Westphalia75Rhineland-Palatinate15Saarland3Schleswig-Holstein11Total248112784117
12168
20517
1
512
1735
2075
402312
852
21
722

Post-election

Election night: Brandt and Scheel declare victory at 10:20pm

On 14 December 1972 the Bundestag MPs of the social-liberal coalition re-elected Willy Brandt chancellor. His Cabinet Brandt II returned to government the next day, again with FDP chairman Walter Scheel as vice-chancellor and foreign minister. Defeated Rainer Barzel resigned as CDU chairman on 9 May 1973; he was succeeded by Helmut Kohl.

On 7 May 1974, Brandt would resign in the course of the Guillaume Affair, after one of his personal aides had been unmasked as a Stasi agent. The coalition continued under his party fellow Helmut Schmidt, while Brandt remained SPD chairman until 1987.

Notes

References

References

  1. "Wahl des deutschen Bundeskanzlers – Kanzlerwahl".
Info: Wikipedia Source

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.

Want to explore this topic further?

Ask Mako anything about 1972 West German federal election — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.

Research with Mako

Free with your Surf account

Content sourced from Wikipedia, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

This 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