West German federal election, 1969

German federal election, 1969

1965 ←
28 September 1969 (1969-09-28)
→ 1972

All 496 seats in the Bundestag
249 were needed for a majority
  First party Second party
 
Leader Kurt Georg Kiesinger Willy Brandt
Party CDU/CSU SPD
Leader since 1967 (chancellor since 1966) 1964
Last election 245 seats 202 seats
Seats won 242 224 (254 with FDP)
Seat change -3 +22
Popular vote 15,195,187 14,065,716 (15,969,138)
Percentage 46.1% 42.7% (48.5%)
Swing -1.5% +3.4%

Chancellor before election

Kurt Georg Kiesinger
CDU

Elected Chancellor

Willy Brandt
SPD

The 6th German federal election, 1969, was conducted on 28 September 1969, to elect members to the Bundestag (lower house) of West Germany.

Contents

Issues and Campaign

Upon the resignation of Chancellor Ludwig Erhard on 1 December 1966, a grand coalition of Christian Democrats and Social Democrats had governed West Germany under Federal Chancellor Kurt Georg Kiesinger (CDU) with SPD chairman Willy Brandt as vice-chancellor and foreign minister.

Economics Minister Karl Schiller (SPD) had proposed revaluing (increasing the external value of) the Deutsche Mark, West Germany's currency, to reduce the country's inflation rate and the rate of growth of the country's businesses' income. He also wanted to reduce West Germany's economic dependence on the exports. However, his counterpart Finance Minister Franz-Josef Strauss (CSU) rejected the Deutsche Mark's revaluation, because his strong supporters, the Bavarian farmers, also opposed it. After all, the European Economic Community's foodstuffs prices were paid in US dollars, and the Deutsche Mark's revaluation would have made them less favourable for the West German farmers (i.e. more expensive for other Western Europeans to buy).

The coalition effectively ended already before the regular 1969 Bundestag elections, because of this revaluation conflict. In addition, enough West German voters were at last willing to give the Social Democratic leader, Foreign Minister Willy Brandt, a chance to govern West Germany. Brandt, who ran for the third time after 1961 and 1965, had shown sympathy towards those groups, like left-wing intellectuals and activists of German student movement, who had felt ignored by the Christian Democrat-led coalition governments. In addition, his clear intellect, remarkable self-control and straight essence (being) appealed to ordinary West Germans (see, for example, Erling Bjöl, Grimberg's History of the Nations, volume 22: From Peace to the Cold War, Helsinki: WSOY, 1984, page 491; Bjöl, Grimberg's History of the Nations, volume 23: The Rich West, pages 345-347; Dennis L. Bark and David R. Gress, A History of West Germany, volume 2: Democracy and Its Discontents, 1963-1988, London, UK: Basil Blackwell, 1989).

Results

Party Party List votes Vote percentage (change) Total Seats (change) Seat percentage
Social Democratic Party 14,065,716 42.7% +3.4% 224 +22 45.2%
Free Democratic Party (FDP) 1,903,422 5.8% -3.7% 30 -19 6.0%
Christian Democratic Union (CDU) 12,079,535 36.6% -1.4% 193 -3 38.9%
Christian Social Union (CSU) 3,115,652 9.5% -0.1% 49 +0 9.9%
National Democratic Party (NPD) 1,422,010 4.3% +2.3% 0   0.0%
All Others 379,689 1.1%   0   0.0%
Totals 32,966,024 100.0%   496 +0 100.0%
Germany

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Post-election

Willy Brandt, against the will of several party fellows like Herbert Wehner or Helmut Schmidt, chose to leave the grand coalition with the CDU/CSU, forming a social-liberal coalition with the Free Democratic Party (FDP) instead. On 21 October 1969 he was elected Chancellor of Germany, the first SPD chancellor in the postwar period, after the last Social Democrat holding this position had been Hermann Müller from 1928 to 1930. FDP chairman Walter Scheel succeeded Brandt as vice-chancellor and foreign minister.

Disappointed Kiesinger bitterly complained about the faithless liberals. Though he had again achieved the plurality of votes for the CDU, he had to lead his party into opposition. He was succeeded as chairman by Rainer Barzel in 1971.

However the Cabinet Brandt I could only rely on an absolute majority (Kanzlermehrheit) of twelve votes in the Bundestag. Several party switches in protest against Brandt's Ostpolitik of FDP and SPD members resulted in the snap election of 1972.

Sources