Skip to content
Surf Wiki
Save to docs
politics

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

2009 German presidential election

13th presidential election of the Federal Republic of Germany


13th presidential election of the Federal Republic of Germany

FieldValue
election_name2009 German presidential election
countryGermany
typepresidential
ongoingno
previous_election2004 German presidential election
previous_year2004
next_election2010 German presidential election
next_year2010
election_date23 May 2009
1blankNominators
image1[[File:Koehlerhorst08032007.jpg150x150px]]
nominee1**Horst Köhler**
home_state1Baden-Württemberg
party1Christian Democratic Union of Germany
1data1CDU/CSU, FDP, FW
electoral_vote1**613**
percentage1**50.08%**
image2[[File:Gesine Schwan 2011.jpg150x150px]]
nominee2Gesine Schwan
home_state2Brandenburg
party2Social Democratic Party of Germany
1data2SPD, Grüne, SSW
electoral_vote2503
percentage241.09%
image3[[File:Peter Sodann Worms cropped.jpg150x150px]]
nominee3Peter Sodann
home_state3Saxony-Anhalt
party3The Left (Germany)
1data3Die Linke
electoral_vote391
percentage37.43%
titlePresident
before_electionHorst Köhler
before_partyCDU/CSU
after_electionHorst Köhler
after_partyCDU/CSU

An indirect presidential election (officially the 13th Federal Convention) was held in Germany on 23 May 2009. The president of Germany is elected by the Federal Convention, which is made up of the members of the Bundestag and an equal number of members elected by the state parliaments.

The incumbent Horst Köhler (supported by CDU/CSU and FDP) stood for reelection and faced Gesine Schwan (supported by SPD and Alliance '90/The Greens).

The Left (successor of the Party of Democratic Socialism) indicated they might be prepared to support Schwan if the SPD agreed to be open to cooperation with the Left on the federal level, but ultimately decided they would present their own candidate. The party nominated party activist and TV actor Peter Sodann on 14 October 2008; and it was left undecided whether the party would support Schwan if Sodann was eliminated after the first round of voting.

Frank Rennicke was nominated as the joint candidate of the far-right parties NPD and DVU.

Following the Hesse state elections in January 2009, which strengthened CDU and FDP, and the Free Voters' promise to support Köhler, his reelection was seen as likely; however, CDU/CSU, FDP and Free Voters only had a slim majority in the Federal Assembly (50.16%), which made the election very competitive. In the end, Köhler was reelected in the first round of voting by 613 votes, which was exactly the minimum number of votes necessary. His nearest rival's, Social Democrat Gesine Schwan, received 503 votes making a second round unnecessary. It has been seen by some as an important indicator for the federal elections in September.

Composition of the electoral assembly

PartySeats%
CDU/CSU49740.6%
SPD41834.2%
FDP1078.7%
The Greens957.8%
The Left907.4%
Bavarian Free Voters100.8%
NPD30.2%
DVU10.1%
SSW10.1%
non-faction members of the Bundestag20.2%
1,224

Results

CandidatesVotes%Parties
Horst Köhler61350.08CDU/CSU, FDP, FW
Gesine Schwan50341.09SPD, The Greens, SSW
Peter Sodann917.43Die Linke
Frank Rennicke40.33NPD, DVU
Abstention100.82-
Invalid20.16-
Not present10.08-
Total of cast votes122399.92-
Total votes1224100.00-

References

it:Elezioni presidenziali tedesche del 2009

References

  1. See [[Bundesversammlung (Germany). Bundesversammlung]] for more details and references
  2. [http://www.nzz.ch/nachrichten/international/koehler_will_sich_um_zweite_amtszeit_bewerben__1.740129.html Bundespräsident Köhler will nochmals antreten (International, NZZ Online)]
  3. "Bundespräsidenten-Wahl - Linke bieten Tausch an - n-tv.de".
  4. "DerStandard.at".
  5. (23 May 2009). "German president wins re-election". [[BBC]].
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 2009 German presidential 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