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Landtag of Schleswig-Holstein

The Schleswig-Holstein Landtag is the state parliament of the German state of Schleswig-Holstein. It convenes in the state's capital Kiel and currently consists of 69 members of five parties. The current majority consists of coalition of the Christian Democratic Union and the Greens, supporting the cabinet of Minister President Daniel Günther.

Landtag of Schleswig-Holstein

Schleswig-Holsteinischer Landtag

11 October 1868

Kristina Herbst, CDU
since 18 May 2022
Eka von Kalben, Greens
since 7 June 2022

69

Government (48)

Opposition (21)

The Landtag maintains partnerships with the parliament of the West Pomeranian Voivodeship, the Oblast Duma of the Kaliningrad Oblast and the parliament of the Pomeranian Voivodeship.

Seat[edit]

Since 1950, the Landtag convenes in the Landeshaus in Kiel, which was built in 1888 as the Royal Marine Academy.[1] During the Nazi-Era, the Landeshaus served as seat of the German Navy's Baltic Sea Command.[1] Up to 1950, the Landtag convened in Lübeck, Flensburg and Eckernförde as well as in Kiel.[1] Since its renovation in 2003, the Landtag is assembled in a new Chamber inside of the Landeshaus.[1]

Electoral system[edit]

The Landtag is elected via mixed-member proportional representation. 35 members are elected in single-member constituencies via first-past-the-post voting. 34 members are then allocated using compensatory proportional representation. 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 69 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, and fail to win at least one constituency, are ineligible to receive seats. Parties representing the Danish minority of Southern Schleswig and the Frisians, such as the South Schleswig Voters' Association, are exempt from the threshold.[2] However, they are not guaranteed representation, they must still win enough votes to qualify for at least one mandate (with 69 seats, it's 1/69≈1.4% of the vote).

1946 , Christian Democratic Union (CDU)

Paul Husfeldt

1946 – 1954 , Social Democratic Party (SPD)

Karl Ratz

1954 – 1959 , Christian Democratic Union (CDU)

Walther Böttcher

1959 – 1964 , Christian Democratic Union (CDU)

Claus-Joachim von Heydebreck

1964 – 1971 , Christian Democratic Union (CDU)

Paul Rohloff

1971 – 1983 , Christian Democratic Union (CDU)

Helmut Lemke

1983 – 1987 , Christian Democratic Union (CDU)

Rudolf Titzck

1987 – 1992 , Social Democratic Party (SPD)

Lianne Paulina-Mürl

1992 – 1996 , Social Democratic Party (SPD)

Ute Erdsiek-Rave

1996 – 2005 , Social Democratic Party (SPD)

Heinz-Werner Arens

2005 – 2009 , Christian Democratic Union (CDU)

Martin Kayenburg

2009 – 2012 , Christian Democratic Union (CDU)

Torsten Geerdts

2012-2022 , Christian Democratic Union (CDU)

Klaus Schlie

since 7 June 2022 , Christian Democratic Union (CDU)[3]

Kristina Herbst

So far, the presidents of the Landtag of Schleswig-Holstein have been:

Edit this at Wikidata (in German)

Official website