Hamburg state election, 2008

Hamburg state election, 2008
Hamburg
28 February 2008

All 121 seats of the Hamburg Parliament
  First party Second party
 
Leader Ole von Beust Michael Naumann
Party CDU SPD
Last election 47.2% 30.5%
Seats before 63 41
Seats won 57 45
Seat change -7 +4
Percentage 42.6% 34.1%
Swing -4.6 +3.6%

Seats of the Hamburg Parliament in the 19th legislative period.
This article is part of a series on the
politics and government of
Hamburg

On 24 February 2008 state elections were held in Hamburg, Germany, for the 19th legislative period of the Hamburg Parliament. The four parties having more than 5 percent (minimum to qualify) are the conservative CDU, the social-democratic SPD, the left-wing Die Linke and the ecological Green Party (GAL). CDU and GAL formed a coalition and Ole von Beust continued as Minister-President.

Pre-election

Results of the election 2004 as followed:

Party Vote percentage Total Seats Seat percentage
Christian Democratic Union (CDU) 47.2% 63 52.1%
Social Democratic Party (SPD) 30.5% 41 33.9%
Green-Alternative List (GAL) 12.3% 17 14.0%

Ole von Beust, head of Senate of Hamburg and First Mayor, was the main candidate of the CDU. The candidate for SPD was Michael Naumann.

Results

Party Party List votes Vote percentage Total Seats Seat percentage
Christian Democratic Union (CDU) 331,184 42.6% (-4.6) 56 (-7) 46.3%
Social Democratic Party (SPD) 265,515 34.1% (+3.6) 45 (+4) 37.2%
Green-Alternative List (GAL) 74,744 9.6% (-2.7) 12 (-5) 9.9%
The Left 50,173 6.4% (+6.4) 8 (+8) 6.6%
Free Democratic Party (FDP) 36,995 4.8% (+2.0) 0 (+0) 0.0%
All Others 19,373 2.5% 0 0.0%
Totals 777,984 100.0% 121 100.0%

Post election

Winner Ole von Beust (CDU) did not achieve an absolute majority. He formed Germany's very first "Black-Green"coalition on the federal state level with the Greens (after the respective party colours, CDU's colour is black).[1][2]

On 28 November 2010 the Hamburg Home Office announced that the Hamburg parliament would be dissolved on 16 December 2010. The next elections were held on 20 February 2011.[3]

See also

References

  1. German conservatives win most votes, usa today, 2008-02-24, retrieved 2008-08-13
  2. Kopp, Martin (2008-08-12), Geheime Absprachen zwischen CDU und Grünen (in German), Hamburg, Germany: Die Welt, retrieved 2008-08-13. Check date values in: |year= / |date= mismatch (help)
  3. Veit Medick: Union schäumt, SPD träumt. Koalitionsbruch in Hamburg. Der Spiegel, 28 November 2010


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