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President of the Bundestag

The president of the Bundestag (German: Präsidentin des Deutschen Bundestages or Bundestagspräsidentin; Präsident when the office is held by a man) presides over the sessions of the Bundestag, the federal parliament of Germany, with functions similar to that of a speaker in other countries. In the German order of precedence, the office is ranked second after the president and before the chancellor.

President of the Bundestag
Präsidentin des Deutschen Bundestages
Incumbent
Bärbel Bas
since 26 October 2021
Presidium of the Bundestag
StyleMadam President
(when addressed in the Bundestag)
TypePresiding officer
SeatReichstag building, Berlin
NominatorPolitical parties
AppointerBundestag
traditionally appointing nominee of the largest party
Term lengthContemporaneous to legislative period
Constituting instrumentGerman Basic Law
PrecursorPresident of the Reichstag
Formation7 September 1949
First holderErich Köhler
DeputyVice Presidents of the Bundestag
Websitewww.bundestag.de

The current office-holder is Bärbel Bas (SPD), who was elected during the first session of the 20th Bundestag on 26 October 2021.

Election and customs

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The president of the Bundestag is elected during the constituent session of each election period after the federal elections or in a later session, if the office has fallen vacant, by all members of the Bundestag. The president has to be a member of the Bundestag. Until the election of the president, the session is chaired by the father of the House, the so-called Alterspräsident. Since 2017, this has been the longest serving member of the Bundestag; in 1949-2017, it was the oldest member of the Bundestag by age.[1]

Usually, the president of the Bundestag is a member of the largest parliamentary group. This constitutional convention had emerged already in times of the Weimar Republic, but this is not required by law. The term ends with the election period, and there is no provision for an early removal. The term of the president can only end prematurely if they resign the position, leaves the Bundestag or dies. They can be reelected in the next election period provided they become a member of the Bundestag again.

Traditionally, the president of the Bundestag is elected uncontested. The only exception so far has been in 1954 after the unexpected death of Hermann Ehlers. Ernst Lemmer competed with the "official" CDU/CSU candidate, Eugen Gerstenmaier, and lost after three ballots with a difference of 14 votes (204 for Gerstenmaier, 190 for Lemmer, 15 abstentions).

Presidium of the Bundestag

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The president of the Bundestag has several deputies, the vice presidents of the Bundestag (Vizepräsident des Deutschen Bundestages or Bundestagsvizepräsident), who are supplied by the other parliamentary groups. The number of vice presidents was not fixed in the Bundestag's Geschäftsordnung (rules of order) since 1949, when two were elected, representing opposition and minor party FDP. As the reigning Union of CDU/CSU comprises two independent but complementary parties, CDU in all states but Bavaria, CSU only in Bavaria, the CSU got a deputy in 1953. Since 1961, the other large party, the SPD, also got a second deputy. When the Green party joined in 1983, the number was not increased, and their candidates were not elected. Same for the former communist party PDS after reunification in 1990.

In 1994, things changed when it was decided that each parliamentary group should be represented by at least one vice president.[1] Since then, also Greens and PDS/Left have a deputy.

However, when the new AfD entered the parliament in 2017, as leaders of the opposition, none of their six candidates for vice president has ever been elected, and neither of the over 30 candidates in the 20th Bundestag since 2021. There is some controversy over this cordon sanitaire imposed against the far-right AfD, but the Federal Constitutional Court of Germany has ruled that even though the rules of order of the Bundestag give the AfD the right to a Vice-Presidential post, there is no obligation for any given member of the Bundestag to vote for any given candidate for Vice-President of the Bundestag and the office requires election by a majority vote of the Bundestag. Together, the president and the vice presidents make up the Presidium of the Bundestag.

In the current 20th Bundestag, the vice presidents are:[2]

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The legal foundation for the office is Article 40 of the Basic Law which states that the Bundestag elects a president and vice presidents and is to give itself rules of order. Due to a 1952 Federal Constitutional Court decision, the Geschäftsordnung has to be enacted afresh in every election period, but usually the old rules are reenacted without change.[3] The Geschäftsordnung specifies the duties of the president of the Bundestag and his vice presidents as well as their number.

Duties

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The president's most important duty is to chair the sessions of the Bundestag. The president determines the order of speakers and opens and closes the debates, and ensures that debates take place in an orderly fashion.[4] In the case of grave disruption, they may exclude a member of parliament for up to 30 session days.[5] All draft legislation initiated by the Federal Government, the Bundestag or the Bundesrat is addressed to the president, as well as all submissions and petitions from within or addressed to the Bundestag. The president of the Bundestag also chairs the Council of Elders, which manages the internal affairs of the Bundestag.[6] For the election of a new Federal president, the president of the Bundestag convenes and chairs the Bundesversammlung.[7]

Additionally, the president receives the statements of account of the political parties, monitors party financing and regulates campaign cost reimbursement. The president also has police power over the premises of the parliament and oversees its police force, can veto any search and seizure there to protect the independence of the parliament,[8] and acts as the employer of the Bundestag's public servants.

List of presidents

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Political parties   CDU   SPD

Portrait Name
(Born–Died)
Term of office Political party/parliamentary group Legislative periods
Took office Left office Days
1   Erich Köhler
(1892–1958) (aged 66)
7 September 1949 18 October 1950 1 year, 41 days CDU/CSU 1st
2   Hermann Ehlers
(1904–1954) (aged 50)
19 October 1950 29 October 1954 4 years, 10 days CDU/CSU 1st, 2nd
3   Eugen Gerstenmaier
(1906–1986) (aged 79)
16 November 1954 31 January 1969 14 years, 76 days CDU/CSU 2nd, 3rd, 4th, 5th
4   Kai-Uwe von Hassel
(1913–1997) (aged 84)
5 February 1969 13 December 1972 3 years, 312 days CDU/CSU 6th
5   Annemarie Renger
(1919–2008) (aged 88)
13 December 1972 14 December 1976 4 years, 1 day SPD 7th
6   Karl Carstens
(1914–1992) (aged 77)
14 December 1976 31 May 1979 2 years, 168 days CDU/CSU 8th
7   Richard Stücklen
(1916–2002) (aged 85)
31 May 1979 29 March 1983 3 years, 302 days CDU/CSU 8th, 9th
8   Rainer Barzel
(1924–2006) (aged 82)
29 March 1983 25 October 1984 1 year, 210 days CDU/CSU 10th
9   Philipp Jenninger
(1932–2018) (aged 85)
5 November 1984 11 November 1988 4 years, 6 days CDU/CSU 10th, 11th
10   Rita Süssmuth
(born 1937)
25 November 1988 26 October 1998 9 years, 335 days CDU/CSU 11th, 12th, 13th
11   Wolfgang Thierse
(born 1943)
26 October 1998 18 October 2005 6 years, 357 days SPD 14th, 15th
12   Norbert Lammert
(born 1948)
18 October 2005 24 October 2017 12 years, 6 days CDU/CSU 16th, 17th, 18th
13   Wolfgang Schäuble
(1942–2023) (aged 81)
24 October 2017 26 October 2021 4 years, 2 days CDU/CSU 19th
14   Bärbel Bas
(born 1968)
26 October 2021 Incumbent 3 years, 26 days SPD 20th

Books

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Michael F. Feldkamp (ed.), Der Bundestagspräsident. Amt - Funktion - Person. 16. Wahlperiode, München 2007, ISBN 978-3-7892-8201-0

References

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  1. ^ a b Deutscher Bundestag, The Bundestag's constituent sitting Archived 2006-12-06 at the Wayback Machine
  2. ^ "German Bundestag - The Presidium". German Bundestag. Retrieved 27 March 2021.
  3. ^ (in German) Deutscher Bundestag, Erläuterungen zur Geschäftsordnung
  4. ^ Deutscher Bundestag, Debates Archived 2006-12-06 at the Wayback Machine
  5. ^ Deutscher Bundestag, President and Vice-Presidents Archived 2006-10-03 at the Wayback Machine
  6. ^ Deutscher Bundestag, Council of Elders Archived 2005-05-05 at the Wayback Machine
  7. ^ Deutscher Bundestag, The Federal Convention Archived 2006-08-27 at the Wayback Machine
  8. ^ (in German) Deutscher Bundestag, Gesetzliche Grundlage Archived 2007-05-27 at the Wayback Machine für die Polizei beim Bundestag