2021 Berlin state election

Summary

The 2021 Berlin state election, ruled invalid in 2022 and repeated in 2023, was held on 26 September 2021, on the same day as the 2021 German federal election, which also had to be repeated in parts of Berlin due to irregularities. Thus, the 19th Abgeordnetenhaus of Berlin[1][2] was elected twice.

2021 Berlin state election

← 2016 26 September 2021 2023 →

All 147 seats in the Abgeordnetenhaus of Berlin, including 17 overhang and leveling seats
74 seats needed for a majority
Turnout1,844,278 (75.4%)
Increase 8.5 pp
  First party Second party Third party
 
2021-09-26 Abgeordnetenhauswahlabend SPD Berlin by Sandro Halank–030.jpg
Pressefoto Bettina-Jarasch 2014.jpg
2014-09-09 - Kai Wegner MdB - 7002.jpg
Candidate Franziska Giffey Bettina Jarasch Kai Wegner
Party SPD Greens CDU
Last election 38 seats, 21.6% 27 seats, 15.2% 31 seats, 17.6%
Seats won 36 32 30
Seat change Decrease 2 Increase 5 Decrease 1
Popular vote 390,329 343,871 328,587
Percentage 21.4% 18.9% 18.0%
Swing Decrease 0.1 pp Increase 3.7 pp Increase 0.4 pp

  Fourth party Fifth party Sixth party
 
2017-11-16 Klaus Lederer (Wiki Loves Parliaments 2017 in Berlin) by Sandro Halank.jpg
Kristin_Brinker,_AfD_(Martin_Rulsch)_2017-11-16.jpg
Portrait Sebastian Czaja.jpg
Candidate Klaus Lederer Kristin Brinker Sebastian Czaja
Party Left AfD FDP
Last election 27 seats, 15.6% 25 seats, 14.2% 12 seats, 6.7%
Seats won 24 13 12
Seat change Decrease 3 Decrease 12 Steady 0
Popular vote 256,063 145,712 130,201
Percentage 14.1% 8.0% 7.1%
Swing Decrease 1.6 pp Decrease 6.2 pp Increase 0.5 pp


Government before election

Second Müller senate
SPDLeftGreen

Government after election

Giffey senate
SPDGreenLeft

The incumbent government was a red-red-green coalition of the Social Democratic Party (SPD), The Left, and The Greens led by Governing Mayor Michael Müller. Müller did not run for re-election as Mayor, and former federal minister Franziska Giffey led the SPD in the election.[3] The Berlin expropriation referendum was held on the same day, as well as the Borough council elections who function as the municipal elections of Berlin.

The SPD remained the largest party with 21.4% of votes cast, recording minimal change compared to 2016. The Greens narrowly surpassed the opposition Christian Democratic Union (CDU) to become the second largest party with 19% of the vote. The Left recorded a small decline to 14%, while the Alternative for Germany (AfD) lost almost half its vote share and finished on 8%. The Free Democratic Party (FDP) remained the smallest party in the Abgeordnetenhaus with 7%.[4]

Post-election, SPD's Giffey and Bettina Jarasch of the Greens both spoke out in favour of a coalition involving their parties.[4] They ultimately renewed the outgoing government with The Left. Franziska Giffey was elected as Governing Mayor on 21 December and her cabinet was sworn in the same day.[5]

Due to numerous irregularities that took place during the election, the Constitutional Court of the State of Berlin annulled the results in November 2022. As a result, repeat elections were scheduled for the next year.[6]

Election date edit

The last election took place on 18 September 2016. The Abgeordnetenhaus has a term of five years, so the next regular elections must take place no later than September 2021.[2] Federal Minister of the Interior Horst Seehofer recommended that the election take place on the same date as the 2021 German federal election, which took place on 26 September 2021.[1]

Electoral system edit

The Abgeordnetenhaus is elected via mixed-member proportional representation. 78 members are elected in single-member constituencies via first-past-the-post voting. 52 members are then allocated using compensatory proportional representation, distributed in each of Berlin's twelve boroughs. German voters have two votes: the "first vote" for candidates in single-member constituencies, and the "second vote" for party lists, which are used to fill the proportional seats. The minimum size of the Abgeordnetenhaus is 130 members, but if overhang seats are present, proportional leveling seats will be added to ensure proportionality. An electoral threshold of 5% of valid votes is applied to the Abgeordnetenhaus; parties that fall below this threshold are excluded from the Abgeordnetenhaus. However, parties which win at least one single-member constituency are exempt from the threshold and will be allocated seats proportionally, even if they fall below 5%.[2]

Background edit

In the previous election held on 13 March 2016, the SPD remained the largest party with 21.6% of the vote, a loss of 6.7 percentage points. The Christian Democratic Union (CDU) was the second largest party with 17.6%, a loss of 5.7 points. The Left overtook The Greens to become the third largest party on 15.6%, while The Greens won 15.2%. Alternative for Germany (AfD) contested their first election in Berlin, winning 14.2%. The Free Democratic Party (FDP) re-entered the Abgeordnetenhaus with 6.7%.

The SPD had led a coalition with the CDU since 2011, but this government lost its majority in the election. The SPD subsequently formed a coalition with The Left and The Greens.

Parties edit

The table below lists parties currently represented in the 18th Abgeordnetenhaus of Berlin.

Name Ideology Lead
candidate
Leader(s) 2016 result
Votes (%) Seats
SPD Social Democratic Party of Germany
Sozialdemokratische Partei Deutschlands
Social democracy Franziska Giffey Franziska Giffey
Raed Saleh
21.6%
38 / 160
CDU Christian Democratic Union of Germany
Christlich Demokratische Union Deutschlands
Christian democracy Kai Wegner Kai Wegner 17.6%
31 / 160
Linke The Left
Die Linke
Democratic socialism Klaus Lederer Katina Schubert 15.6%
27 / 160
Grüne Alliance 90/The Greens
Bündnis 90/Die Grünen
Green politics Bettina Jarasch Nina Stahr
Werner Graf
15.2%
27 / 160
AfD Alternative for Germany
Alternative für Deutschland
Right-wing populism Kristin Brinker Kristin Brinker 14.2%
25 / 160
FDP Free Democratic Party
Freie Demokratische Partei
Classical liberalism Sebastian Czaja Christoph Meyer 6.7%
12 / 160

Campaign edit

Lead candidates edit

On 5 October 2020, the Greens nominated Bettina Jarasch, spokeswoman for integration and refugees, as their lead candidate for the election. She previously served as chairwoman of the state party from 2011 to 2016.[7] She was formally elected as lead candidate on 12 December.[8]

On 9 October, state CDU leader Kai Wegner was selected as his party's lead candidate.[9]

Prior to the election, incumbent mayor Michael Müller voiced his desire to move into federal politics rather than seek another term. On 30 November 2020, the state party executive nominated Federal Minister for Family Affairs, Senior Citizens, Women and Youth Franziska Giffey as lead candidate for the election. She was simultaneously elected co-leader of the Berlin branch of the party alongside parliamentary group leader Raed Saleh.[9][3]

On 8 December, The Left nominated incumbent Deputy Mayor and Senator for Culture Klaus Lederer as its lead candidate for the election. Lederer is noted as one of the most popular politicians in Berlin, achieving consistently high approval ratings.[10]

On 27 March 2021, the FDP elected parliamentary group leader Sebastian Czaja as their lead candidate for the election.[11]

Opinion polling edit

Graphical summary edit

 
Local regression of polls conducted.

Party polling edit

Polling firm Fieldwork date Sample
size
SPD CDU Linke Grüne AfD FDP Others Lead
2021 state election 26 Sep 2021 21.4 18.0 14.1 18.9 8.0 7.1 12.5 2.5
INSA 22–24 Sep 2021 1,000 23 15 14 17 11 8 12[a] 6
Wahlkreisprognose 22–23 Sep 2021 1,040 25 15.5 14.5 15.5 10.5 7.5 12 9.5
Forschungsgruppe Wahlen 20–22 Sep 2021 1,103 22 17 13 19 9 7 13 3
Forschungsgruppe Wahlen 13–16 Sep 2021 1,000 21 17 12 20 9 8 13 1
Infratest dimap 13–15 Sep 2021 1,510 24 16 13 18 10 7 12[b] 6
Wahlkreisprognose 9–14 Sep 2021 1,553 25 14.5 14.5 14.5 10.5 8.5 12.5 10.5
Wahlkreisprognose 23–24 Aug 2021 1,050 24.5 15 15 15.5 11 9.5 9.5 9
Infratest dimap 18–21 Aug 2021 1,160 23 19 12 17 11 8 10 4
INSA 16–23 Aug 2021 1,000 22 16 15 18 12 9 8[c] 4
Forsa 5–10 Aug 2021 2,007 21 17 14 21 10 7 10 Tie
Wahlkreisprognose 24–31 Jul 2021 2,420 24 18 15 15.5 9 9 9.5 6
Wahlkreisprognose 29 Jun–6 Jul 2021 2,950 21 20 14 16 9.5 10.5 9.5 1
INSA 16–22 Jun 2021 1,000 18 18 13 22 12 10 7[d] 3
Infratest dimap 9–14 Jun 2021 1,198 17 21 12 22 10 9 9 1
Wahlkreisprognose 3–10 Jun 2021 1,553 20.5 18 13 16 8.5 12.5 11.5[e] 2.5
INSA 11–17 May 2021 1,000 20 16 13 25 12 9 5[f] 5
Infratest dimap 20–24 Apr 2021 ? 17 18 14 27 9 7 8 9
INSA 12–20 Apr 2021 1,024 19 16 14 25 12 10 4 6
Infratest dimap 16–20 Feb 2021 1,007 18 22 15 23 9 6 7 1
INSA 11–18 Dec 2020 1,002 18 22 16 18 12 7 7 4
INSA 28 Sep–5 Oct 2020 1,007 18 21 16 20 12 6 7 1
Infratest dimap 15–19 Sep 2020 1,001 15 22 15 26 10 6 6 4
INSA 7–13 Jul 2020 1,012 16 21 18 19 12 5 9 2
Infratest dimap 22–25 Apr 2020 1,002 20 23 14 21 10 5 7 2
Forsa 29 Jan–6 Feb 2020 1,011 15 16 17 25 11 6 10 8
INSA 10–18 Dec 2019 1,006 15 18 19 23 13 7 5 4
Forsa 12–19 Dec 2019 1,005 15 17 19 22 11 6 10 3
Forsa 21–28 Nov 2019 1,006 16 17 17 25 11 5 10 8
Infratest dimap 11–16 Nov 2019 1,003 16 18 17 23 14 5 7 5
Forsa 22–31 Oct 2019 1,002 15 18 16 25 11 5 10 7
Forsa 17–26 Sep 2019 1,002 16 17 16 24 11 6 10 7
INSA 10–16 Sep 2019 1,018 15 17 18 24 14 6 6 6
Forsa 20–29 Aug 2019 1,003 16 16 17 24 11 6 10 7
Forsa 17–25 Jul 2019 1,001 16 17 18 25 10 5 9 7
Forsa 17–27 Jun 2019 1,004 15 17 17 25 10 7 9 8
Forsa 20–27 May 2019 1,006 16 15 17 26 11 7 8 9
Infratest dimap 30 Apr–3 May 2019 1,000 15 17 19 23 10 6 10 4
Forsa 16–25 Apr 2019 1,005 16 17 18 25 11 7 6 7
INSA 5–8 Apr 2019 1,030 16 19 19 19 12 9 6 Tie
INSA 19–28 Mar 2019 1,003 15 18 18 25 10 8 6 7
Forsa 20–28 Feb 2019 1,001 17 20 18 22 11 7 5 2
Forsa 22–31 Jan 2019 1,002 16 19 20 21 11 8 5 1
Forsa 11–19 Dec 2018 1,009 15 17 18 23 13 7 7 5
INSA 10–17 Dec 2018 1,007 16 18 16 21 14 8 7 3
Forsa 19–29 Nov 2018 1,003 15 18 18 23 13 7 6 5
Infratest dimap 14–17 Nov 2018 1,002 15 18 18 24 13 6 6 6
INSA 23 Oct–2 Nov 2018 1,019 16 16 17 22 15 7 7 5
Forsa October 2018 1,005 15 16 19 22 13 8 7 3
Forsa 19–27 Sep 2018 1,005 16 17 22 18 13 7 7 4
Forsa 21–30 Aug 2018 1,004 17 19 21 18 12 6 7 2
Forsa 16–26 Jul 2018 1,009 17 19 21 17 13 7 6 2
INSA 9–16 Jul 2018 1,012 17 18 17 18 14 7 9 Tie
Forsa 20–28 Jun 2018 1,009 19 18 21 16 11 8 7 2
Forsa 22–31 May 2018 1,004 18 19 20 18 11 7 7 1
Infratest dimap 9–12 May 2018 1,000 18 21 22 15 11 6 7 1
Forsa 17–26 Apr 2018 1,001 19 19 19 18 11 7 7 Tie
INSA 3–9 Apr 2018 1,039 19 19 19 17 13 8 5 Tie
Forsa 19–28 Mar 2018 1,003 20 20 18 17 12 7 6 Tie
Forsa 12–22 Feb 2018 1,006 19 19 20 18 12 6 6 1
Forsa 15–25 Jan 2018 1,008 20 19 18 17 11 7 8 1
Forsa 12–21 Dec 2017 1,002 20 20 18 17 11 6 8 Tie
Forsa 13–23 Nov 2017 1,002 18 21 18 16 11 8 8 3
Forsa 17–26 Oct 2017 1,011 19 20 18 14 11 9 9 1
Forsa 26 Sep–5 Oct 2017 1,002 18 19 19 15 11 9 9 Tie
Infratest dimap 6–9 Sep 2017 1,000 21 23 19 14 10 7 6 2
Forsa 22–30 Aug 2017 1,005 19 21 17 14 9 11 9 2
Forsa 18–27 Jul 2017 1,007 20 22 18 14 8 9 9 2
Forsa 22–29 Jun 2017 1,003 21 22 17 14 8 9 9 1
Forsa 16–24 May 2017 1,001 22 23 16 13 8 8 10 1
Infratest dimap 17–20 May 2017 1,000 22 24 17 13 10 8 6 2
Forsa 19–27 Apr 2017 1,002 24 20 16 12 9 8 11 4
Forsa 20–30 Mar 2017 1,005 25 20 16 13 8 7 11 5
Forsa 13–23 Mar 2017 1,004 25 17 16 13 10 8 11 8
Forsa 16–26 Jan 2017 1,008 20 20 16 15 12 8 9 Tie
Forsa 12–23 Dec 2016 1,003 20 20 17 16 12 7 8 Tie
Forsa 14–24 Nov 2017 1,001 19 20 16 17 13 7 8 1
Infratest dimap 21–23 Nov 2016 1,003 21 19 17 15 13 7 8 2
Forsa 19–27 Oct 2016 1,002 20 18 16 16 13 7 10 2
2016 state election 18 Sep 2016 21.6 17.6 15.6 15.2 14.2 6.7 7.4 4.0

Results edit

 
Results of the party list vote by voting precinct (Wahlbezirk).
 
PartyConstituencyParty listTotal
seats
+/–
Votes%+/–SeatsVotes%+/–Seats
Social Democratic Party (SPD)422,75423.36–1.4325390,32921.43–0.131136–2
Alliance 90/The Greens (GRÜNE)361,63619.99+4.2324343,87118.88+3.69832+5
Christian Democratic Union (CDU)355,69619.66–0.1721328,58718.04+0.43930–1
The Left (LINKE)252,47013.95–1.486256,06314.06–1.581824–3
Alternative for Germany (AfD)146,0918.07–6.052145,7128.00–6.161113–12
Free Democratic Party (FDP)119,2266.59+1.030130,2017.15+0.4512120
Human Environment Animal Protection60,9903.37+3.37040,1282.20+0.33000
Die PARTEI36,3052.01+0.79032,8001.80–0.15000
Grassroots Democratic Party29,7701.65New023,0551.27New00New
Volt Germany20,2051.11New00New
Team Todenhöfer18,8531.03New00New
Free Voters16,8970.93New015,2970.84New00New
The Greys12,6540.69New00New
Grey Panthers8,9100.49–0.62000
Animal Protection Here!8,0590.44New00New
Climate List Berlin7,8990.43New00New
Pirate Party Germany1,6710.09–1.8907,4400.41–1.32000
Party for Health Research4,8870.27–0.21000
Renters' Party1,0790.06+±0.0004,2610.23+0.23000
The Humanists3,8800.21New00New
The Urbans. A HipHop Party6980.04New03,5870.20New00New
Ecological Democratic Party1,0720.06+0.0502,4460.13+0.12000
Bildet Berlin!2,4860.14New00New
National Democratic Party8520.05–0.2702,3490.13–0.45000
German Communist Party2,3590.13–0.08000
Bergpartei, die "ÜberPartei"1,7130.09+0.06000
Liberal Conservative Reformers9790.05+0.0401,2630.07–0.34000
The Pinks/Alliance 21740.00New09700.05New00New
Civil Rights Movement Solidarity5750.03–0.05000
Socialist Equality Party4920.03New00New
Human World1740.01–0.04000
The New Democrats950.01New00New
The Republicans180.00New0550.00New00New
German Conservative90.00New00New
The Women1200.01New00New
Liberal Democrats280.00New00New
Democratic Left210.00–0.00000
Independents1,0390.06–0.21000
Total1,809,486100.00781,821,664100.0069147-13
Total votes1,844,2781,844,278
Registered voters/turnout2,447,60075.35+8.462,447,60075.35+8.46
Source: State Returning Officer
Popular vote
SPD
21.43%
GRÜNE
18.88%
CDU
18.04%
LINKE
14.06%
AfD
8.00%
FDP
7.15%
Other
12.46%
Abgeordnetenhaus seats
SPD
24.49%
GRÜNE
21.77%
CDU
20.41%
LINKE
16.33%
AfD
8.84%
FDP
8.16%

By constituency edit

Constituency Personal vote List vote
Previous member Elected member Votes % Margin Runner-up % SPD Grüne CDU Linke AfD FDP Other
Mitte 1 Ramona Pop Silke Gebel 8,680 35.2 4,374 Astrid Hollmann 17.5 15.4 31.3 13.4 14.2 3.4 10.9 11.3
Mitte 2 Carola Bluhm Max Landero 5,555 21.8 305 Stefan Lehmkühler 20.7 19.7 19.6 14.6 20.7 6.0 8.8 10.6
Mitte 3 Thomas Isenberg Jian Omar 7,208 31.9 2,231 Thomas Isenberg 22.0 20.0 28.3 15.0 13.5 3.9 8.1 11.2
Mitte 4 Marc Urbatsch Taylan Kurt 7,832 36.9 3,961 Stephan Rauhut 18.2 16.7 32.3 9.2 18.2 4.0 5.5 14.1
Mitte 5 Bruni Wildenhein-Lauterbach Mathias Schulz 4,765 25.6 648 Ario Mirzaie 22.1 22.8 20.5 14.0 15.7 7.6 5.1 14.2
Mitte 6 Ralf Wieland Tuba Bozkurt 5,091 29.8 1,290 Stephan Böhme 22.2 17.5 26.2 8.2 22.8 4.8 4.3 16.3
Mitte 7 Maja Lasić Laura Neugebauer 5,179 28.1 790 Maja Lasić 23.8 19.9 25.0 10.0 18.6 5.0 5.3 16.2
Friedrichshain-Kreuzberg 1 Katrin Schmidberger Katrin Schmidberger 9,153 41.2 5,010 Hannah Lupper 18.6 16.9 36.3 8.3 19.2 2.2 5.0 12.2
Friedrichshain-Kreuzberg 2 Marianne Burkert-Eulitz Marianne Burkert-Eulitz 7,833 38.8 2,206 Elif Eralp 27.9 12.9 37.3 5.1 26.4 1.9 3.3 13.1
Friedrichshain-Kreuzberg 3 Turgut Altuğ Turgut Altuğ 7,010 35.0 2,938 Ali Reza Amiri 20.4 17.5 30.9 7.7 22.7 2.7 3.6 14.8
Friedrichshain-Kreuzberg 4 Steffen Zillich Damiano Valgolio 5,326 24.7 211 Monika Herrmann 23.8 18.2 21.7 10.3 25.3 5.8 5.7 12.8
Friedrichshain-Kreuzberg 5 Daniela Billig Vasili Franco 8,109 34.7 2,327 Steffen Zillich 24.8 12.9 32.5 6.8 25.4 3.3 4.8 14.5
Friedrichshain-Kreuzberg 6 New seat Julian Schwarze 8,988 38.6 3,747 Kerstin Wolter-Ehling 22.5 12.3 35.2 7.1 23.1 2.9 5.9 13.5
Pankow 1 Christian Buchholz Johannes Kraft 6,390 25.4 1,104 Willi Francke 21.0 21.7 10.3 19.7 13.7 14.0 7.0 13.6
Pankow 2 Torsten Hofer Torsten Hofer 5,692 22.6 510 Lars Bocian 20.6 21.4 15.1 18.8 13.4 11.0 7.5 12.8
Pankow 3 Torsten Schneider Oda Hassepaß 6,190 23.8 24 Klaus Lederer 23.7 19.3 23.5 11.9 19.3 7.5 5.6 12.9
Pankow 4 Dennis Buchner Dennis Buchner 5,149 24.1 1,208 Dirk Stettner 18.4 22.1 13.3 17.0 16.4 11.8 6.1 13.3
Pankow 5 Udo Wolf Louis Krüger 5,036 21.9 180 Katrin Seidel 21.1 19.6 20.6 11.6 20.4 8.4 4.9 14.5
Pankow 6 Andreas Otto Andreas Otto 10,451 41.3 5,204 Katja Rom 20.8 13.0 37.7 6.9 21.9 2.8 5.7 12.1
Pankow 7 Clara West Julia Schneider 7,136 30.7 2,452 Sandra Brunner 20.2 16.3 27.4 9.1 21.4 6.4 5.6 13.8
Pankow 8 Stefan Gelbhaar Daniela Billig 9,108 38.2 4,437 Janine Walter 19.6 13.3 35.2 8.7 20.5 3.2 7.2 11.8
Pankow 9 Tino Schopf Tino Schopf 6,878 27.4 740 Stefanie Remlinger 24.5 18.9 25.1 10.6 20.6 6.5 5.6 12.8
Charlottenburg-Wilmersdorf 1 Fréderic Verrycken Christian Hochgrebe 5,466 27.6 1,216 Jana Brix 21.5 24.4 20.3 17.4 9.4 7.3 8.2 13.0
Charlottenburg-Wilmersdorf 2 Andreas Statzkowski Ariturel Hack 7,007 28.9 1,379 Alexander Sempf 23.2 22.7 19.7 25.8 6.8 4.9 11.5 8.6
Charlottenburg-Wilmersdorf 3 Ülker Radziwill Petra Vandrey 7,555 31.0 1,789 Ülker Radziwill 23.6 21.7 28.5 15.5 11.4 3.8 8.6 10.5
Charlottenburg-Wilmersdorf 4 Frank Jahnke Christoph Wapler 6,564 27.0 583 Reinhard Naumann 24.6 22.0 25.1 18.7 8.9 4.0 11.5 9.7
Charlottenburg-Wilmersdorf 5 Claudio Jupe Sandra Khalatbari 7,000 30.0 1,756 Claudia Buß 22.5 21.2 17.6 27.8 6.4 5.0 14.0 8.1
Charlottenburg-Wilmersdorf 6 Franziska Becker Alexander Kaas Elias 6,403 26.4 19 Franziska Becker 26.3 22.7 25.5 19.2 9.3 3.9 9.4 10.0
Charlottenburg-Wilmersdorf 7 Florian Dörstelmann Florian Dörstelmann 6,681 26.2 526 Stefanie Bung 24.1 23.8 21.8 22.0 8.3 5.0 9.3 9.9
Spandau 1 Bettina Domer Sebahat Atli 6,346 28.7 752 Bettina Meißner 25.3 26.4 10.8 24.4 5.9 11.0 7.2 14.2
Spandau 2 Raed Saleh Raed Saleh 6,073 32.3 2,114 Ersin Nas 21.1 27.5 11.6 21.5 6.7 11.0 6.9 14.8
Spandau 3 Daniel Buchholz Stephan Machulik 6,288 29.2 1,488 Kerstin Brauner 22.3 25.2 13.4 22.4 7.0 9.7 7.5 14.8
Spandau 4 Heiko Melzer Heiko Melzer 6,892 31.2 485 Hannah Erez-Hübner 29.0 26.6 9.2 29.9 4.6 10.5 7.7 11.5
Spandau 5 Peter Trapp Kai Wegner 8,970 36.5 2,817 Uwe Ziesak 25.0 23.3 13.0 33.0 4.2 8.1 9.1 9.2
Steglitz-Zehlendorf 1 Andreas Kugler Benedikt Lux 7,376 28.9 2,817 Andreas Kugler 23.8 22.7 24.6 19.5 8.5 4.6 9.2 10.9
Steglitz-Zehlendorf 2 Matthias Kollatz-Ahnen Matthias Kollatz-Ahnen 6,519 27.9 1,307 Tonka Wojahn 22.3 24.4 21.3 20.0 8.1 5.6 9.2 11.4
Steglitz-Zehlendorf 3 Christian Goiny Christian Goiny 8,611 31.3 2,188 Martin Matz 23.3 22.3 20.5 27.4 5.2 4.7 11.8 8.2
Steglitz-Zehlendorf 4 Cornelia Seibeld Cornelia Seibeld 7,178 31.7 2,188 Carolyn Macmillan 25.7 24.4 16.0 28.3 5.1 6.3 10.1 9.7
Steglitz-Zehlendorf 5 Oliver Friederici Oliver Friederici 6,493 29.4 812 Mirjam Golm 25.7 24.9 14.3 26.0 5.6 7.6 9.9 11.7
Steglitz-Zehlendorf 6 Adrian Grasse Adrian Grasse 8,025 31.0 2,247 Ina Czyborra 22.4 20.5 20.8 27.6 6.3 4.3 12.2 8.3
Steglitz-Zehlendorf 7 Stephan Standfuß Stephan Standfuß 7,787 30.7 2,137 Susanne Mertens 22.3 20.2 19.9 28.9 4.7 4.2 14.1 8.1
Tempelhof-Schöneberg 1 Notker Schweikhardt Sebastian Walter 8,552 33.2 2,606 Wiebke Neumann 23.1 20.5 29.9 13.8 13.7 3.7 7.1 11.2
Tempelhof-Schöneberg 2 Catherina Pieroth-Manelli Catherina Pieroth-Manelli 9,121 35.9 2,997 Michael Biel 24.1 19.8 33.0 10.6 15.3 3.3 5.4 12.5
Tempelhof-Schöneberg 3 Dilek Kalayci Orkan Özdemir 8,838 32.1 999 Annabelle Wolfsturm 28.5 22.4 30.8 15.4 10.4 3.5 7.2 10.2
Tempelhof-Schöneberg 4 Michael Müller Aferdita Suka 6,267 25.7 421 Jens Fischwasser 24.0 21.9 23.1 17.3 11.9 5.4 6.5 13.9
Tempelhof-Schöneberg 5 Frank Zimmermann Lars Rauchfuß 6,460 28.0 389 Roman Simon 26.3 25.6 13.3 24.5 7.2 7.9 7.7 13.8
Tempelhof-Schöneberg 6 Florian Graf Scott Körber 7,658 33.1 1,518 Sinem Taşan-Funke 26.5 25.2 10.6 30.9 4.5 9.1 9.0 10.7
Tempelhof-Schöneberg 7 Hildegard Bentele Christian Zander 8,727 35.6 2,722 Melanie Kühnemann-Grunow 24.5 23.6 10.6 33.9 4.2 8.7 8.6 10.4
Neukölln 1 Anja Kofbinger André Schulze 7,958 33.8 1,703 Lucy Redler 26.6 16.9 32.1 5.6 26.4 3.0 2.7 13.2
Neukölln 2 Susanna Kahlefeld Susanna Kahlefeld 7,429 32.9 630 Jorinde Schulz 30.1 16.9 31.9 5.1 26.9 3.1 2.5 13.6
Neukölln 3 Joschka Langenbrinck Derya Çağlar 5,571 27.2 630 Georg Kössler 20.5 25.6 19.8 10.5 19.2 5.9 4.0 15.1
Neukölln 4 Derya Çağlar Marcel Hopp 7,746 36.1 1,943 Christopher Förster 27.1 36.3 6.1 23.7 5.2 10.3 6.4 12.0
Neukölln 5 Robbin Juhnke Nina Lerch 7,333 30.3 392 Robbin Juhnke 28.7 33.1 9.4 24.8 5.0 9.2 7.3 11.3
Neukölln 6 Karin Korte Franziska Giffey 9,771 40.8 3,116 Olaf Schenk 27.8 34.2 6.9 26.7 4.1 10.5 7.3 10.4
Treptow-Köpenick 1 Katalin Gennburg Katalin Gennburg 7,005 26.2 1,666 Alexander Freier-Winterwerb 20.0 18.7 20.6 9.8 23.1 8.5 4.8 14.5
Treptow-Köpenick 2 Lars Düsterhöft Lars Düsterhöft 8,156 31.4 3,197 Philipp Wohlfeil 19.1 24.0 12.7 11.6 19.1 11.5 5.9 15.3
Treptow-Köpenick 3 Frank Scholtysek Ellen Haußdörfer 5,952 22.9 1,314 Stefan Evers 17.8 21.7 9.8 16.7 14.8 14.9 7.3 14.7
Treptow-Köpenick 4 Robert Schaddach Robert Schaddach 7,292 26.6 2,728 André Schubert 16.7 21.4 12.1 15.8 17.3 12.0 7.9 13.5
Treptow-Köpenick 5 Tom Schreiber Tom Schreiber 5,780 26.0 1,680 Stefanie Fuchs 18.4 23.1 8.5 15.0 17.9 14.6 7.0 13.9
Treptow-Köpenick 6 Carsten Schatz Dunja Wolff 5,909 22.0 441 Carsten Schatz 20.4 21.2 13.5 16.5 19.6 10.4 6.8 11.8
Marzahn-Hellersdorf 1 Gunnar Lindemann Gunnar Lindemann 4,049 22.7 70 Gordon Lemm 22.3 20.1 5.3 12.7 18.6 21.7 5.2 16.3
Marzahn-Hellersdorf 2 Manuela Schmidt Manuela Schmidt 5,156 24.0 140 Iris Spranger 23.4 23.1 5.5 15.6 20.9 17.2 4.7 13.1
Marzahn-Hellersdorf 3 Jessica Bießmann Jeannette Auricht 4,335 22.0 250 Steffen Ostehr 20.8 19.9 5.4 13.9 18.3 20.9 4.9 16.8
Marzahn-Hellersdorf 4 Christian Gräff Christian Gräff 9,278 35.5 4,399 Regina Kittler 18.7 17.5 7.9 27.5 18.3 12.5 4.7 11.5
Marzahn-Hellersdorf 5 Mario Czaja Katharina Günther-Wünsch 9,461 33.5 4,251 Luise Lehmann 18.5 18.8 8.9 29.0 14.7 11.8 6.4 10.3
Marzahn-Hellersdorf 6 Kristian Ronneburg Alexander Herrmann 5,541 27.9 1,860 Kristian Ronneburg 18.6 19.5 5.9 20.9 17.9 16.6 5.0 14.2
Lichtenberg 1 Kay Nerstheimer Danny Freymark 5,635 25.5 1,475 Ines Schmidt 18.8 20.6 5.1 19.8 17.4 18.1 4.7 14.1
Lichtenberg 2 Wolfgang Albers Martin Pätzold 5,055 21.3 77 Robert Schneider 21.0 21.0 8.0 18.8 19.4 13.7 6.3 12.9
Lichtenberg 3 Marion Platta Claudia Engelmann 5,526 24.4 302 Karsten Strien 23.1 23.1 10.1 12.5 21.2 12.3 5.7 15.2
Lichtenberg 4 Sebastian Schlüsselburg Sebastian Schlüsselburg 7,198 29.4 2,002 Tamara Lüdke 21.3 19.5 16.8 9.9 24.5 9.1 5.0 15.2
Lichtenberg 5 Hendrikje Klein Hendrikje Klein 6,441 26.4 1,527 Patricia Holland-Moritz 20.1 20.1 15.3 10.4 23.1 10.3 5.0 15.8
Lichtenberg 6 Harald Wolf Andreas Geisel 6,636 27.1 1,527 Norman Wolf 21.2 22.4 17.2 12.8 20.2 8.2 5.8 13.4
Reinickendorf 1 Burkard Dregger Bettina König 4,820 27.2 592 Burkard Dregger 23.8 23.7 13.2 21.4 9.1 10.7 5.6 16.3
Reinickendorf 2 Emine Demirbüken-Wegner Jörg Stroedter 5,031 26.8 61 Emine Demirbüken-Wegner 26.5 24.7 11.0 25.0 6.0 11.9 6.8 14.6
Reinickendorf 3 Stephan Schmidt Stephan Schmidt 7,946 33.4 1,742 Nicola Böcker-Giannini 26.1 23.5 14.0 31.5 4.0 7.6 8.9 10.6
Reinickendorf 4 Tim Zeelen Björn Wohlert 7,026 28.4 485 Sven Meyer 26.4 23.9 13.4 27.0 5.3 9.4 8.4 12.5
Reinickendorf 5 Michael Dietmann Michael Dietmann 5,043 30.7 563 Sevda Boyraci 27.3 26.2 8.3 27.8 4.9 12.3 7.0 13.5
Reinickendorf 6 Jürn Jakob Schultze-Berndt Frank Balzer 8,764 36.6 3,560 Kai Kottenstede 21.8 20.4 17.7 34.3 3.9 5.8 10.0 8.1
Berlin N/A N/A N/A 21.4 18.9 18.0 14.1 8.0 7.1 12.5

Aftermath edit

Government formation edit

The results showed that the next government would have to consist of three parties, in order to get a majority; all parties ruled out the possibility of working with the AfD. Before the results, the SPD's candidate Franziska Giffey had stated that she was looking to form a coalition involving the CDU and the FDP. Post-election, both the SPD's Giffey and Bettina Jarasch of the Greens spoke out in favour of a coalition involving their parties but differed on a third partner, as Giffey favoured a traffic light coalition with the FDP, while the Greens voiced their desire to renew the incumbent red–red–green coalition with The Left. Giffey faced resistance within her party for her stance. The SPD and Greens agreed to seek preliminary discussions with both the FDP and Left.[12][13] On 14 October, Giffey announced that the SPD would enter coalition negotiations with the Greens and The Left.[14]

The three parties finalised a coalition agreement on 28 November.[15] It was approved by 91.5% of delegates at an SPD congress on 5 December.[16] On, 12 December, it was passed by the Greens congress 96.4% approval.[17] The Left carried out a membership ballot on the coalition pact. Most party representatives endorsed the agreement, though some, such as Katalin Gennburg, campaigned against it. The results were announced on 17 December, with 74.9% of members voting in favour of the agreement.[18]

Giffey was elected as Governing Mayor by the Abgeordnetenhaus on 21 December, winning 84 votes out of 139 votes. The Giffey senate, comprising four SPD, three Green, three Left, and one independent senator, was sworn in the same day.[5]

Irregularities and annulment edit

Numerous irregularities were reported during the elections in Berlin, including shortages of ballot papers, unusually long queues to vote, ballots being delivered to the wrong locations, and in some cases voters being turned away or offered only ballot papers for the federal election. Problems were exacerbated by a marathon taking place in the city on the same day. Irregularities were especially common in the Charlottenburg-Wilmersdorf and Friedrichshain districts. State electoral officer Petra Michaelis resigned three days after the election, taking responsibility for the failures in the election process. The state interior minister announced an inquiry into the events and stated that investigations would take place concerning incidents at approximately 100 of Berlin's 2,245 polling stations. This was later revised to 207 of 2,257 polling stations. Reviews and corrections are considered unlikely to change the overall results of the state or federal elections, but may affect the outcome of results in the Charlottenburg-Wilmersdorf 6 and Marzahn-Hellersdorf 1 constituencies for the state election.[19][20][21] Preliminary results showed the SPD candidate ahead by 8 votes in Charlottenburg-Wilmersdorf 6; a recount saw the seat flip to the Greens by a margin of 23 votes. The new result was later certified by the electoral office.[22]

On 22 November, the state electoral committee and interior ministry requested that the Constitutional Court of the State of Berlin rule on the validity of the election results in the Pankow 3, Charlottenburg-Wilmersdorf 6, and Marzahn-Hellersdorf 1 constituencies. The court may determine that a repeat of the elections is necessary in the affected constituencies; it is expected to take several months to deliver its verdict. The interior ministry clarified that, although irregularities were recorded in many constituencies, they were only significant enough to change the result in the three specified. Nonetheless, the state government plans to establish an expert committee to investigate the irregularities.[23]

After months of investigation and hearings, on 28 September 2022, the Constitutional Court of the State of Berlin issued a preliminary assessment declaring that a full repeat of both the state and district council elections was likely necessary.[24] The court handed down its official ruling on 16 November, voiding the results and mandating a new election within 90 days.The president of the court Ludgera Selting [de] stated that the frequency and gravity of irregularities were severe enough to affect the outcome of the results, and that serious systemic flaws were present during preparation for the election.[6]

The new election must take place within 90 days – 14 February 2023 at the latest.[25][6] A likely date is Sunday 12 February. The repeat election will not reset the legislative period, meaning another full state election must still take place in 2026 or earlier.[26]

In addition, the Election Audit Committee of the Bundestag reviewed the findings of the Berlin Constitutional Court to determine whether a repeat of the federal election was required in Berlin. On 7 November, the committee recommended that the elections be repeated in 431 affected polling stations. This was put forward by the governing coalition of the SPD, Greens, and FDP, who formed the majority in the committee. The CDU/CSU and AfD factions opposed this, insisting that a full repeat in the six affected constituencies should take place. The committee's recommendation was approved by the Bundestag on 10 November.[6][27][28] Due to a differing process and anticipated legal challenges which could bring the issue before the Federal Constitutional Court, any repeat of the federal election in Berlin is unlikely to take place for a longer period of time, and may be delayed to 2024.[25][26]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Free Voters 3%, Tierschutzpartei 3%, Others 6%
  2. ^ Tierschutzpartei 3%, Others 9%
  3. ^ Free Voters 3%, Others 5%
  4. ^ Free Voters 2%, Others 5%
  5. ^ PARTEI 5%, Others 6.5%
  6. ^ Free Voters 3%, Others 2%

References edit

  1. ^ a b "Termin für Abgeordnetenhauswahl in 2021 rückt näher" [The date for the Abgeordnetenhaus election in 2021 is approaching] (in German). Government of Berlin. 20 November 2020. Archived from the original on 1 December 2020. Retrieved 28 December 2020.
  2. ^ a b c "Wahlen" (in German). Berlin Ministry for the Interior and Sport. Archived from the original on 23 January 2021. Retrieved 27 May 2020.
  3. ^ a b "SPD-Landesvorstand nominiert Franziska Giffey als Spitzenkandidatin" [SPD state executive nominates Franziska Giffey as the top candidate] (in German). Der Spiegel. 30 November 2020. Archived from the original on 1 December 2020. Retrieved 1 December 2020.
  4. ^ a b "SPD prevails against the Greens in the Berlin election". Rundfunk Berlin-Brandenburg (in German). 27 September 2021. Archived from the original on 27 September 2021. Retrieved 1 October 2021.
  5. ^ a b "Franziska Giffey Elected Governing Mayor of Berlin". Berlin Spectator. 21 December 2021. Archived from the original on 21 December 2021. Retrieved 21 December 2021.
  6. ^ a b c d "Berlin state elections declared void". Deutsche Welle. 16 November 2022.
  7. ^ "Bettina Jarasch soll Grüne Spitzenkandidatin werden" [Bettina Jarasch is to become the Green top candidate] (in German). T-Online. 5 October 2020. Archived from the original on 19 October 2020. Retrieved 21 November 2020.
  8. ^ "Berliner Grüne wählen Jarasch zur Spitzenkandidatin" [Berlin Greens choose Jarasch as the top candidate] (in German). Rundfunk Berlin-Brandenburg. 12 December 2020. Archived from the original on 22 December 2020. Retrieved 29 December 2020.
  9. ^ a b "Kai Wegner will Bürgermeisterkandidat der CDU in Berlin werden" [Kai Wegner wants to be mayoral candidate of the CDU in Berlin] (in German). Der Spiegel. 9 October 2020. Archived from the original on 16 October 2020. Retrieved 21 November 2020.
  10. ^ "Linke nominiert Kultursenator Klaus Lederer als Spitzenkandidaten" [Left nominates Senator for Culture Klaus Lederer as lead candidate] (in German). Der Tagesspiegel. 8 December 2020. Archived from the original on 16 December 2020. Retrieved 15 December 2020.
  11. ^ "Czaja ist FDP-Spitzenkandidat für Abgeordnetenhauswahl" [Czaja is FDP lead candidate for the Abgeordnetenhaus election] (in German). Berliner Morgenpost. 27 March 2021. Archived from the original on 27 March 2021. Retrieved 28 March 2021.
  12. ^ "Result of the R2G explorations support expert commission to examine expropriations for a year". Tagesspiegel (in German). 15 October 2021. Archived from the original on 13 October 2021. Retrieved 16 October 2021.
  13. ^ "The SPD and the Greens want to decide on three-way explorations at the weekend". Rundfunk Berlin-Brandenburg (in German). 6 October 2021. Archived from the original on 16 October 2021. Retrieved 16 October 2021.
  14. ^ "SPD leader Giffey is aiming for a government with the Greens and the Left". Der Spiegel (in German). 14 October 2021. Archived from the original on 28 October 2021. Retrieved 3 November 2021.
  15. ^ "Berlin SPD, the Greens and the Left agree on a coalition agreement". RBB24 (in German). 28 November 2021. Archived from the original on 21 December 2021. Retrieved 21 December 2021.
  16. ^ "SPD clearly votes for red-green-red - Giffey sees "strong tailwind"". RBB24 (in German). 5 December 2021. Archived from the original on 21 December 2021. Retrieved 21 December 2021.
  17. ^ "Berlin: Greens agree to coalition agreement and for Jarasch as transport senator". Berliner Zeitung (in German). 12 December 2021. Archived from the original on 21 December 2021. Retrieved 21 December 2021.
  18. ^ "Berlin Left votes for red-green-red coalition agreement". RBB24 (in German). 17 December 2021. Archived from the original on 21 December 2021. Retrieved 21 December 2021.
  19. ^ "German election: Berlin voters face polling station chaos". Deutsche Welle. 26 September 2021. Archived from the original on 12 October 2021. Retrieved 12 October 2021.
  20. ^ "German election chaos in Berlin — what happens now?". Deutsche Welle. 11 October 2021. Archived from the original on 12 October 2021. Retrieved 12 October 2021.
  21. ^ "Berlin's Constitutional Court to review election results". Deutsche Welle. 14 October 2021. Archived from the original on 14 October 2021. Retrieved 14 October 2021.
  22. ^ "Recount: SPD candidate Franziska Becker loses her direct mandate". Berliner Zeitung (in German). 1 October 2021. Archived from the original on 15 October 2021. Retrieved 3 November 2021.
  23. ^ "Electoral committee lodges objection against the Berlin election". Münchner Merkur (in German). 22 November 2021. Archived from the original on 22 November 2021. Retrieved 22 November 2021.
  24. ^ "Court considers "complete invalidity" of the Berlin election possible". Rundfunk Berlin-Brandenburg (in German). 28 September 2022.
  25. ^ a b "Constitutional Court decides on November 16 on repeat election". Rundfunk Berlin-Brandenburg (in German). 6 October 2022.
  26. ^ a b "Why Berlin has two dates for the election repeats". Rundfunk Berlin-Brandenburg (in German). 20 October 2022.
  27. ^ "Committee recommends partial rerun". Tagesschau (in German). 7 November 2022.
  28. ^ "Bundestag election is repeated in 431 Berlin polling stations". Bundestag (in German). 10 November 2022.

External links edit

  • Official website