1976 West German federal election

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1976 West German federal election

← 1972 3 October 1976 (1976-10-03) 1980 →

All 496 seats in the Bundestag[a]
249 seats needed for a majority
Registered42,058,015 Increase 1.5%
Turnout38,165,753 (90.7%) Decrease 0.4pp
  First party Second party Third party
  KAS-Kohl, Helmut-Bild-1339-2 (cropped).jpg Bundesarchiv Bild Helmut Schmidt 1975 cropped.jpg Bundesarchiv FDP-Bundesparteitag, Genscher.jpg
Candidate Helmut Kohl Helmut Schmidt Hans-Dietrich Genscher
Party CDU/CSU SPD FDP
Last election 44.9%, 225 seats 45.8%, 230 seats 8.4%, 41 seats
Seats won 243[c] 214[d] 39[b]
Seat change Increase 18 Decrease 16 Decrease 2
Popular vote 18,394,801 16,099,019 2,995,085
Percentage 48.6% 42.6% 7.9%
Swing Increase 3.7pp Decrease 3.2pp Decrease 0.5pp

Bundestagswahl 1976 - Ergebnisse Wahlkreise.png
Results by constituency for the first votes. Grey denotes seats won by the CDU/CSU; red denotes seats won by the SPD.

Government before election

First Schmidt cabinet
SPDFDP

Government after election

Second Schmidt cabinet
SPDFDP

Federal elections were held in West Germany on 3 October 1976 to elect the members of the 8th Bundestag. Although the CDU/CSU alliance became the largest faction in parliament, Helmut Schmidt of the Social Democratic Party remained Chancellor.

Campaign[]

The coalition of the SPD and the FDP wanted to be re-elected, with the SPD, since 1974 led by Helmut Schmidt, the party's candidate for Chancellor. The CDU and the CSU tried to achieve an absolute majority of the votes to make CDU chairman Helmut Kohl Chancellor.

Results[]

Bundestag 1976.svg
Party Constituency Party list Total
seatsa
+/–
Votes % Seats Votes % Seats
Social Democratic Party (SPD) 16,471,321 43.7 114 16,099,019 42.6 100 214 −16
Christian Democratic Union (CDU) 14,423,157 38.3 94 14,367,302 38.0 96 190 +13
Christian Social Union (CSU) 4,008,514 10.6 40 4,008,514 10.6 13 53 +5
Free Democratic Party (FDP) 2,417,683 6.4 0 2,995,085 7.9 39 39 −2
National Democratic Party (NPD) 136,028 0.4 0 122,661 0.3 0 0 0
German Communist Party (DKP) 170,855 0.5 0 118,581 0.3 0 0 0
Communist Party of Germany (KPD-AO) 8,822 0.0 0 22,714 0.1 0 0 New
Action Community of Independent Germans (AUD) 19,490 0.1 0 22,202 0.1 0 0 0
Communist League of West Germany (KBW) 21,414 0.0 0 20,018 0.1 0 0 New
European Workers' Party (EAP) 3,177 0.0 0 6,811 0.0 0 0 New
Christian Bavarian People's Party (CBV) 4,876 0.0 0 6,720 0.0 0 0 New
International Marxist Group (GIM) 2,037 0.0 0 4,759 0.0 0 0 New
Action Community Fourth Party (AVP) 2,636 0.0 0 4,723 0.0 0 0 New
5%-Block 985 0.0 0 2,940 0.0 0 0 New
Independent Workers' Party (UAP) 499 0.0 0 765 0.0 0 0 0
United Left (VL) 217 0.0 0 701 0.0 0 0 New
Right and Freedom Party (RFP) 227 0.0 0 0 New
Independents and voter groups 3,706 0.0 0 0 0
Valid votes 37,695,644 98.8 37,822,500 99.1
Invalid/blank votes 470,109 1.2 343,253 0.9
Total votes 38,165,753 100.0 248 38,165,753 100.0 248 496 0
Registered voters/turnout 42,058,015 90.7 42,058,015 90.7
Source: Bundeswahlleiter
^a – excludes the non-voting delegates representing West Berlin (11 CDU, 10 SPD, 1 FDP).
214 39 243
SPD FDP CDU/CSU
Popular vote
CDU/CSU
48.63%
SPD
42.56%
FDP
7.92%
Other
0.88%
Bundestag seats
CDU/CSU
48.99%
SPD
43.15%
FDP
7.86%

Aftermath[]

The coalition between the SPD and the FDP remained in government, with Helmut Schmidt as Chancellor. Between the "sister parties" of CDU and Bavarian CSU there emerged a critical conflict, as the CSU leader Franz Josef Strauß wanted to break both the united Bundestag group of the parties and the agreement not to compete against each other in any Land. Later, this attack was withdrawn, while Strauß became candidate for chancellor for the 1980 elections.

Notes[]

  1. ^ As well as the 22 non-voting delegates representing West Berlin, elected by the West Berlin Legislature.
  2. ^ As well as 1 non-voting delegate for West Berlin.
  3. ^ As well as 11 non-voting delegates for West Berlin.
  4. ^ As well as 10 non-voting delegates for West Berlin.

References[]

External links[]

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