Landtag of Rhineland-Palatinate
Landtag of Rhineland-Palatinate Landtag Rheinland-Pfalz | |
|---|---|
| Type | |
| Type | |
| Established | 4 June 1947 |
| Leadership | |
President | |
| Structure | |
| Seats | 101 |
Political groups | Government (54)
Opposition (47)
|
| Elections | |
Last election | 14 March 2021 |
Next election | 22 March 2026 |
| Meeting place | |
| Deutschhaus, Mainz | |
| Website | |
| landtag.rlp.de | |
The Landtag of Rhineland-Palatinate is the state diet of the German state of Rhineland-Palatinate.
Article 79, Section 1 of the Rhineland-Palatinate constitution provides: "The Landtag is the supreme organ of political decision-making, elected by the people. It represents the people, elects the Minister-President and confirms the cabinet, passes the laws and the budget, controls the executive and enunciates the popular will in the conduct of public affairs, in questions of European policy and according to the agreements between the Landtag and the cabinet."
The Landtag consists of 101 members.
The Landtag convenes in the Deutschhaus building,[1] where also the first democratically elected parliament German history had convened, the Rhenish-German national convention of the Mainz Republic. Parts of its administration are located in the old arsenal.
The German flag used in the Landtag is a historical one used during the Hambacher Fest.
Electoral system
The Landtag is elected via mixed-member proportional representation. 52 members are elected in single-member constituencies via first-past-the-post voting. 49 members are then allocated using compensatory proportional representation, distributed in four multi-member districts.[2] 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 Landtag is 101 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 Landtag; parties that fall below this threshold are excluded.[3]
Composition
After the elections of March 14, 2021, the composition of the Landtag is as follows:
| Party | Seats |
|---|---|
| Social Democratic Party (SPD) | 39 |
| Christian Democratic Union (CDU) | 31 |
| Alliance '90/The Greens | 10 |
| Alternative for Germany (AfD) | 9 |
| Free Democratic Party (FDP) | 6 |
| Free Voters (FW) | 6 |
Political groups in bold support the state's coalition government. Since 2011 the Webster/Sainte-Laguë method is used for allocating seats in party-list proportional representation.[4]
The parliamentary groups are chaired by Alexander Schweitzer (SPD), Christian Baldauf (CDU), Uwe Junge (AfD), Cornelia Willius-Senzer (FDP), and Bernhard Braun (Greens).[5]
Presidents of the Landtag
- 1947–1948 Jakob Diel, CDU
- 1948–1959 August Wolters, CDU
- 1959–1971 Otto van Volxem, CDU
- 1971–1974 Johannes Baptist Rösler, CDU
- 1974–1985 Albrecht Martin, CDU
- 1985–1991 Heinz Peter Volkert, CDU
- 1991–2006 Christoph Grimm, SPD
- 2006–2016 Joachim Mertes, SPD
- since 2016 Hendrik Hering, SPD [1]
See also
References
- ^ a b ""Landtag zurück im sanierten Sitz"". Die Zeit (in German). 8 September 2021. Retrieved 8 May 2022.
- ^ "Publication - Electoral Districts". Rhineland-Palatinate State Returning Officer.
- ^ "The Electoral System" (PDF). Rhineland-Palatinate State Returning Officer. 20 April 2020.
- ^ Sainte-Laguë/Schepers at the pages of the Federal Returning Officer, retrieved 7 October 2017
- ^ Rheinland-Pfalz, Landtag. "Fraktionen" (in German). Retrieved 2019-09-14.