-1849 years ago today, voters in the Federal
Republic of Germany elected the German
Bundestag (lower house of parliament) for the first time. The elections were run as laid down in Article 38 of the German
constitution: they were universal, direct, free, equal and secret. After the years of National
Socialism, during which there were no elections, this was something special. The most prominent
parties in the
election campaign were the CDU with Konrad Adenauer and Ludwig Erhard, and the SPD with its leading candidate, Kurt Schuhmacher.
And then August 14 arrived. Voter turnout was very high at 78.5 percent (that would be a virtual miracle today!). And the big parties were neck-
and-
neck. The CDU received 31.0 percent of the vote, the SPD 29.2. As there was not yet a “five-
percent clause” (this clause stipulates that a party can only be represented in the Bundestag if it wins five percent of the “second votes”), smaller parties also entered the Bundestag. Altogether, eight
parliamentary parties were represented in the parliament, along with three independent candidates who were directly elected in their constituencies.
The CDU, FDP and the German Party (Deutsche Partei or DP) formed the governing coalition. In the first sitting on September 15, Konrad Adenauer was voted in as the first
Chancellor of the Federal Republic of Germany with a one-
vote
majority.