2019 Social Democratic Party of Germany leadership election

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

2019 Social Democratic Party of Germany leadership election
← 2018 14 October – 30 November 2019
6–8 December (confirmation)
2021 →
Turnout226,775 (53.3%) (first round)
230,215 (54.1%) (second round)
  2019-09-10 SPD Regionalkonferenz Team Esken Walter-Borjans by OlafKosinsky MG 0461.jpg 2019-09-10 SPD Regionalkonferenz Team Geywitz Scholz by OlafKosinsky MG 2562.jpg 2019-09-10 SPD Regionalkonferenz Team Kampmann Roth by OlafKosinsky MG 0459.jpg
Candidate Norbert Walter-Borjans
Saskia Esken
Olaf Scholz
Klara Geywitz

Michael Roth
First round 44,967 48,473 34,793
First round % 21.0% 22.7% 16.3%
Second round 114,995 98,246 Eliminated
Second round % 53.1% 45.3%

  2019-09-10 SPD Regionalkonferenz Team Scheer Lauterbach by OlafKosinsky MG 0446.jpg 2019-09-10 SPD Regionalkonferenz Petra Köpping by OlafKosinsky MG 2216.jpg 2018-02-28 Boris Pistorius-6247.jpg 2019-09-10 SPD Regionalkonferenz Team Schwan Stegner by OlafKosinsky MG 0444.jpg
Candidate Nina Scheer
Karl Lauterbach

Boris Pistorius
Gesine Schwan
Ralf Stegner
First round 31,271 31,230 20,583
First round % 14.6% 14.4% 9.6%
Second round Eliminated Eliminated Eliminated

Leader before election

Andrea Nahles (resigned 3 June 2019)
Malu Dreyer, Thorsten Schäfer-Gümbel, Manuela Schwesig (acting)

Elected Leader

Saskia Esken and Norbert Walter-Borjans

The 2019 Social Democratic Party of Germany leadership election took place in the autumn of 2019 to elect the new leadership of the Social Democratic Party of Germany following the resignation of the Andrea Nahles on 3 June 2019. Although the leader(s) of the party are elected indirectly by a party convention,[1] for the first time since 1993 the SPD held a vote by the membership to decide the candidate(s) which the party's executive board will propose to the party convention. Though the convention is not obliged to elect the proposed candidates, the membership vote is considered politically binding.[2]

The membership vote was held in two rounds, with the top two tickets from the first round proceeding to a runoff. In the first round held between 14 and 25 October, Olaf Scholz and Klara Geywitz placed first with 22.7% of the vote, while Norbert Walter-Borjans and Saskia Esken placed second with 21.0%. In the second round, Walter-Borjans and Esken won with 53.1% of the vote to Scholz and Geywitz's 45.3%.

This was seen as an upset victory for the left-wing of the SPD, including skeptics of the grand coalition with the CDU. Esken and Walter-Borjans were little-known to the public at large, Esken being a backbencher in the Bundestag and Walter-Borjans being the former Minister of Finance of North Rhine-Westphalia from 2010 to 2017. Scholz on the other hand had the backing of much of the party establishment, including General Secretary Lars Klingbeil and several Minister-Presidents such as Stephan Weil[3] and Hamburg First Mayor Peter Tschentscher.

In December 2019, the SPD party convention elected Walter-Borjans and Esken as the new co-leaders of the party. Though they had previously hinted an end the grand coalition with the CDU, they backed away from that, first proposing a revision of the coalition agreement. The CDU did not accept this and thus, the coalition continued.[4]

Background[]

In the 2017 federal election, the SPD won just 20.5% of votes cast, its worst result in the history of the Federal Republic. Party leader Martin Schulz subsequently announced that the SPD would not renew the grand coalition with the Christian Democratic Union (CDU) in which it had served since 2013. However, in November, after it became clear that there were no viable alternatives, Schulz reneged on his pledge and called an extraordinary party conference which voted to negotiate a new coalition agreement with the CDU. Schulz was subject to significant opposition and criticism from the party, and resigned as leader in February 2018. However, the coalition agreement was approved by 66.0% of the party members in a vote held later that month, and the SPD re-entered government.

Schulz proposed Andrea Nahles as his successor, and she was confirmed as the SPD's new leader at a party convention in April 2018. Nahles quickly faced difficulties with the new government as many disputes arose over the summer of 2018, including the "asylum quarrel" and controversy around Hans-Georg Maaßen. Nahles was unable to stabilize her party as its performance in opinion polling declined to record lows, accompanied by a string of historically poor state election performances. In national polling, the SPD was overtaken by the Greens in October 2018, and the party polled around 15% through early 2019. In the 2019 European elections held on 26 May, the SPD placed third, winning only 15.8% of votes cast – the worst result for the party on a national level since 1887. Nahles came under major pressure to step down, and announced her resignation on 3 June. The party was thereafter led by acting leaders Malu Dreyer, Thorsten Schäfer-Gümbel and Manuela Schwesig until the party conference in December which elected the new leadership.

Procedure[]

Party members were permitted to declare their candidacy between 1 July and 1 September. Candidates were able to run as a sole candidate to head the party alone, or with another member on a two-person ticket to serve as co-leaders. In the latter case, at least one candidate was required to be female. Each single candidate or two-person ticket needed sufficient support from state, regional, or local SPD associations in order to run. The requirements were one state association, one regional district, or five local districts. If no candidacy receives an absolute majority of the votes cast in the first round, the two candidacies with the highest number of votes cast proceed to a second round. Both votes were to be considered invalid if less than 20% of the party membership participated. The party's executive board was to propose the winner of the vote to the party convention which took place between 6 and 8 December.[5]

Candidates[]

Candidates[]

Name Previous service State Announcement date Nomination Ref.
2019-09-10 SPD Regionalkonferenz Team Esken Walter-Borjans by OlafKosinsky MG 0461.jpg Norbert Walter-Borjans
Saskia Esken
Minister of Finance of North Rhine-Westphalia (2010–2017)
Member of the Bundestag for Baden-Württemberg (since 2013)
North Rhine-Westphalia
Baden-Württemberg
30 August 2019 Under District Aachen
Under district Rheinisch-Bergischer Kreis
Under District Calw
complete
[6][7]
2014-09-10 - Christina Kampmann MdB - 7327.jpg
Pressefoto StM Michael Roth MdB 01.jpg

Michael Roth
North Rhine-Westphalia State Minister for Families, Children, Youth, Culture and Sport (2015–2017)
Minister of state at the Federal Foreign Office (since 2018)
North Rhine-Westphalia
Hesse
2 July 2019 District Hesse North
complete
[8][9]
2019-04-10-Karl Lauterbach-Maischberger-5321.jpg
20140426 xl dr-nina-scheer-mdb-vorstand-h-scheer-sti6335 (cropped).jpg
Karl Lauterbach
Nina Scheer
Member of the Bundestag (since 2005)
Member of the Bundestag (since 2013)
North Rhine-Westphalia
Schleswig-Holstein
12 July 2019 Under District Segeberg
Under District Leverkusen
Under District Stormarn
Under District Duchy of Lauenburg
Under District Essen
complete
[10][11][12][13][14]
Blank portrait, male (rectangular).png Member of the Bundestag (1981–1983 and 1990–1998) North Rhine-Westphalia 15 July 2019 pending [15]
Ahrens profilbild.jpg
Simone Lange.jpg

Simone Lange
Mayor of Bautzen (since 2015)
Mayor of Flensburg (since 2017)
Saxony
Schleswig-Holstein
2 August 2019 Under District Bautzen,
Under District ,
Under District Schwarzwald-Baar,
Under District Pfaffenhofen,
Under District Dithmarschen

complete

[16]
Blank portrait, male (rectangular).png Vice President of the SPD Economy-Council Berlin 5 August 2019 pending [17]
2015-12 Gesine Schwan SPD Bundesparteitag by Olaf Kosinsky-8.jpg
2018-12-09 SPD Europadelegiertenkonferenz Ralf Stegner 2831.jpg
Gesine Schwan
Ralf Stegner
2004 and 2009 candidate for President of Germany
Leader of the SPD-group in the Schleswig-Holstein state parliament (since 2008)
Brandenburg
Schleswig-Holstein
14 August 2019 Under District Bremen-Nord,
Under District Rosenheim-Land,
Under District Frankfurt (Oder),
Under District Pinneberg,

Under District Rendsburg-Eckernförde
complete

[18]
2016-12-15 Petra Köpping (Landtagsprojekt Sachsen) by Sandro Halank–2.jpg
Profilbild Boris Pistorius.jpg

Boris Pistorius
Saxony State minister for Equalitiy and Integration (since 2014)
Lower Saxony State minister for the Interior (since 2013)
Saxony
Lower Saxony
16 August 2019 State Association Saxony,
State Association Lower Saxony;
District Weser-Ems,
District North-Lower Saxony;
Under District North Saxony,
Under District Osnabrück,
Under District Leipzig,
Under District Hildesheim,
Under District Chemnitz,
Under District Leer,
Under District Erzgebirge

complete


Hilde Mattheis
Union secretary of ver.di
Member of the Bundestag (since 2002)
Bavaria
Baden-Württemberg
18 August 2019
16-03-09-Klara-Geywitz RR26591.jpg
Olaf Scholz - Deutscher Radiopreis 2016 01.jpg
Klara Geywitz
Olaf Scholz
Member of the Brandenburg state parliament (2004-2019)
Vice Chancellor of Germany and Federal Minister of Finance (since 2018)
Brandenburg
Brandenburg
20 August 2019 Hamburg state association
complete
[19]

Individuals who have publicly expressed interest[]

Declined to be candidates[]

Opinion polling[]

Among members[]

Publication date Polling firm Scholz
Geywitz
Lauterbach
Scheer
Schwan
Stegner
Köpping
Pistorius
Lange
Ahrens
Kampmann
Roth
Esken
Walter-Borjans
None/
Others
19–23 Aug 2019 Forsa 26 14 13 12 7 7 21
3 Oct 2019 wahlkreisprognose.de 19 5 6 20 23 21 6

Among officials[]

Publication date Polling firm Scholz
Geywitz
Lauterbach
Scheer
Schwan
Stegner
Köpping
Pistorius
Lange
Ahrens
Kampmann
Roth
None/
Others
19–23 Aug 2019 Forsa 22 13 13 15 11 10 16

Among voters[]

Publication date Polling firm Scholz
Geywitz
Lauterbach
Scheer
Schwan
Stegner
Köpping
Pistorius
Lange
Ahrens
Kampmann
Roth
Esken
Walter-Borjans
None/
Others
26–28 Oct 2019 Civey 35.4 54.2 10.4
5–11 Sep 2019 Civey 23.3 11.0 11.7 14.4 6.9 14.0 18.7

Results[]

Summary of the 2019 Social Democratic Party of Germany leadership election
Candidates 1st round 2nd round
Votes % Votes %
Olaf Scholz & Klara Geywitz 48,473 22.68 98,246 45.33
Norbert Walter-Borjans & Saskia Esken 44,967 21.04 114,995 53.06
& Michael Roth 34,793 16.28
Nina Scheer & Karl Lauterbach 31,271 14.63
& Boris Pistorius 31,230 14.41
Gesine Schwan & Ralf Stegner 20,583 9.63
Voting members  425,630 100.0  425,630 100.0
Total votes 226,775 53.28 230,215 54.09
Abstentions 2,376 1.11 3,480 1.60
Permitted votes 214,956
?
217,175
?
Valid votes 213,693
?
216,721
?
Invalid/blank votes 1,263
?
454
?

1st round results – Click here  · 2nd round results – Click here

First Round
Scholz/Geywitz
22.68%
Walter-Borjans/Esken
21.04%
/Roth
16.28%
Scheer/Lauterbach
14.63%
/Pistorius
14.41%
Schwan/Stegner
9.63%
Second Round
Walter-Borjans/Esken
53.06%
Scholz/Geywitz
45.33%

References[]

  1. ^ "§ 9 PartG - Einzelnorm". www.gesetze-im-internet.de.
  2. ^ Teevs, Christian (June 24, 2019). "SPD-Verfahren zur Nahles-Nachfolge: Genossen suchen die Supersozis". Der Spiegel – via Spiegel Online.
  3. ^ "ZEIT ONLINE | Lesen Sie zeit.de mit Werbung oder im PUR-Abo. Sie haben die Wahl".
  4. ^ Ismar, Georg (3 December 2019). "Die SPD-Spitze sagt die Revolte wieder ab". Der Tagesspiegel Online.
  5. ^ "Wer soll´s werden? Entscheide mit!". Sozialdemokratische Partei Deutschlands (SPD).
  6. ^ "Partei-Bundesvorsitz: NRW-SPD nominiert Norbert Walter-Borjans als Kandidaten".
  7. ^ "Saskia Esken & Norbert Walter-Borjans".
  8. ^ "Nahles-Nachfolge: Erstes SPD-Duo bewirbt sich offiziell um Parteispitze".
  9. ^ https://www1.wdr.de/nachrichten/roth-und-kampmann-nominierung-bundes-spd-100.html
  10. ^ "SPD: Nina Scheer und Karl Lauterbach wollen Parteichefs werden".
  11. ^ "Unterstützung für die Kandidatur Nina Scheer und Karl Lauterbach als Bundesvorsitzende | Herzogtum direkt".
  12. ^ "Karl Lauterbach kandidiert für SPD-Parteivorsitz: Doppelspitze mit Nina Scheer". 23 July 2019.
  13. ^ "SPD Stormarn: Klares Votum für Nina Scheer".
  14. ^ "SPD: Karl Lauterbach und Nina Scheer als Kandidaten für Parteivorsitz nominiert".
  15. ^ "Ein 79-Jähriger und ein Neu-Genosse wollen SPD-Chefs werden".
  16. ^ "Aktuelle Nachrichten - Inland Ausland Wirtschaft Kultur Sport - ARD Tagesschau".
  17. ^ "SPD: Robert Maier will für Parteivorsitz kandidieren".
  18. ^ "SPD Gesine Schwan und Ralf Stegner bewerben sich für Vorsitz".
  19. ^ "Klara Geywitz: Wer ist die SPD-Frau, die mit Olaf Scholz die Partei führen will?".
  20. ^ "Kutschaty ist zur Kandidatur um Parteivorsitz bereit". June 18, 2019 – via Sueddeutsche.de.
  21. ^ "Außenseiter will Nahles-Nachfolge: Innovations-Manager glaubt, er kann SPD retten".
  22. ^ "Klingbeil denkt über Kandidatur für SPD-Vorsitz nach".
  23. ^ "Arbeitsminister Hubertus Heil will nicht SPD-Chef werden". www.tagesspiegel.de.
  24. ^ "SPD-Vorsitz: Stephan Weil verzichtet auf Kandidatur". Faz.net.
  25. ^ "Rehlinger rechnet mit weiteren Kandidaten für SPD-Vorsitz". Die Welt. 6 August 2019.
  26. ^ "Franziska Giffey hält sich Kandidatur für SPD-Vorsitz offen".
Retrieved from ""