Pirate Party of Berlin

Pirate Party Berlin
Piratenpartei Berlin
Chairperson Bruno Kramm
General Secretary Petra Stoll
Deputy Leader Simon Kowalewski
Treasurer Achim Weinberger
Executive Director Therese Lehnen
Founded December 30, 2006 (2006-12-30)
Youth wing Young Pirates
Membership 884[1] (January 2, 2016)
Ideology Pirate politics
Direct democracy
National affiliation Pirate Party Germany
International affiliation Pirate Parties International
Colours Orange
Politics of Germany
Political parties
Elections

The Pirate Party Berlin (German: Piratenpartei Berlin) is the state chapter of the Pirate Party Germany in the city-state of Berlin and was the first chapter of the Pirates to enter a Landtag (state parliament), getting elected to the Abgeordnetenhaus of Berlin in 2011. The party divides itself into so-called Crews (self-organizing units) at the local level. Work groups on specific themes are called Squads.[2] Since 2010, the national association has used the software LiquidFeedback for intra-party decision-making.[3]

History

Summary of Berlin Pirate Party election results

 
Election %
European Parliament election, 2009 1.4
German federal election, 2009 3.4
Borough Assembly elections, 2011 8.5
Berlin state election, 2011 8.9
German federal election, 2013 3.6
European Parliament election, 2014 3.2
Bruno Kramm of Das Ich was elected PPB chair in 2014 and confirmed in 2015

The state chapter was founded 30 December 2006. During the 2009 federal election, the Berlin Pirate Party received 3.4 percent of the votes, which was their best showing at the national level. During the 2011 Berlin state election, the party entered a state parliament for the first time when they received 8.9 percent of the votes for the state parliament of Berlin. Lead candidate of the party list, Andreas Baum, was thus given a seat.[4]

List of Chairpersons:

Political positions

One of the main concerns of the Pirate Party at the country level is transparency in politics and public administration. The Berlin Pirate Party pioneered livestreaming party meetings on the internet[5] and making the records available for download.[6]

As per its 2011 election programme, the Berlin Pirate Party advocates the promotion of alternative residential projects and cultural institutions as well as the preservation of open spaces in inner-city areas. It also opposes the so-called "Berlin Line" low-tolerance anti-squatting policy.[7] The party is also in favor of a ticket-less public transport system in Berlin.[8] The successful "Referendum on Disclosing Partial Privatizations of the Berlin Waterworks" (Volksentscheid über die Offenlegung der Teilprivatisierungsverträge bei den Berliner Wasserbetrieben) was supported by the Berlin Pirates. For Berlin schools, the party also supports ethical education on drug use ("Drug Maturity" model).[9] The party also wants to remove the minimum voting age clause for Berlin state parliament elections. In addition, three chapters of their party's basic program are devoted to animal welfare.[10]

Representatives in the state parliament

2011 lead candidate Andreas Baum

In the state parliament of Berlin (Abgeordnetenhaus von Berlin), all 15 Pirate Party candidates (14 men and 1 woman) were elected directly through their mandate. Of the parties in the state parliament, the Pirates have the lowest percentage of female representatives, with only 6.6 percent.

Because of double candidacies, three seats in the Borough Assembly (BVV) in Friedrichshain-Kreuzberg could not be filled. Because of this, the pirates could not take city council posts for which they were eligible.[11][12]

  • Oliver Höfinghoff (*)[15]
  • Simon Kowalewski
  • Christopher Lauer (*)[15]
  • Philipp Magalski
  • Pavel Mayer (*)[13]
  • Alexander Morlang
  • Wolfram Prieß
  • Fabio Reinhardt
  • Alexander Spies
  • Simon Weiß (*)[16]

(*) During 2014-2015, Baum, Delius, Herberg, Höfinghoff, Lauer, Mayer und Weiß laid down their party membership, but continued to work with the remaining PPB parliamentary group.


Representatives in Borough Assemblies

The Pirate Party is represented in all 12 borough assemblies in Berlin. In five assemblies, the pirates cannot fully occupy their allocated seats because they received more seats than they had candidates. The following table shows the number of seats per district and, in parentheses, the number of vacant seats:


Charlottenburg-Wilmersdorf

Friedrichshain-Kreuzberg

Lichtenberg

Marzahn-Hellersdorf

Mitte

Neukölln

Pankow

Reinickendorf

Spandau

Zehlendorf

Schöneberg

Köpenick
4 5 (+4) 5 4 (+1) 4 (+2) 4 6 4 3 (+1) 3 4 4 (+1)

See also

References

  1. Piraten-Haushalt - Mitgliederstatistik
  2. Crew Concept, Pirate Party Germany, State Chapter Berlin
  3. Information about LiquidDemocracy on the wiki of the Pirate Party
  4. "Die Landeswahlleiterin für Berlin - Berliner Wahlen 2011 - Ergebnisse nach Regionen - Zweitstimmen - Ergebnistabelle". wahlen-berlin.de (in German). Retrieved 2011-09-19.
  5. Piratenfraktion Berlin Livestream
  6. Records of the sessions of the BPP parliamentary group
  7. Urban development in the 2011 electoral program of the Pirate Party Berlin
  8. Traffic in the 2011 electoral program of the Pirate Party Berlin
  9. Addiction policy in the 2011 electoral program of the Pirate Party Berlin
  10. Animal Welfare in the basic program of the Pirate Party Berlin
  11. Article: A city council for Pirates and the Left (Ein Stadtrat für Piraten und Linke), published in Berliner Zeitung 21 September 2011, and accessed 11 March 2013.
  12. Frankfurter Allgemeine Sonntagszeitung; Article: In the Net of Pirates (Im Netz der Piraten), published 25 September 2011
  13. 1 2 Tagesspiegel / Klaus Kurpjuweit (October 4, 2015): Parteiaustritte in Berlin. Piraten verlassen ihr Schiff.)
  14. DPA / Handelsblatt (December 14, 2015): Prominenter Parteiaustritt bei den Piraten. „Ich hatte einfach die Faxen dicke“].
  15. 1 2 morgenpost.de
  16. Tagesspiegel / Sabine Beikler (September 24 2014): Mitgliederschwund bei Piratenpartei in Berlin. Dritter Pirat im Parlament tritt aus der Partei aus.

External links

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Piratenpartei Berlin.
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Monday, February 01, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.