Social Democratic Party of Germany







































































































Social Democratic Party of Germany
Sozialdemokratische Partei Deutschlands
Abbreviation
SPD
Leader
Andrea Nahles
General Secretary
Lars Klingbeil
Deputy Leaders


  • Ralf Stegner

  • Thorsten Schäfer-Gümbel

  • Olaf Scholz

  • Manuela Schwesig

  • Natascha Kohnen

  • Malu Dreyer



Founded
23 May 1863 (155 years ago) (1863-05-23)
Merger of
ADAV and SDAP
Headquarters
Willy-Brandt-Haus
D-10911 Berlin
Newspaper
Vorwärts
Student wing


  • Sozialistischer Deutscher Studentenbund (1946–61)


  • Sozialdemokratischer Hochschulbund (de) (1961–72)


  • Juso-Hochschulgruppen (since 1973)


Youth wing
Jusos
Women's wing
Association of Social Democratic Women
Membership (January 2017)
Increase 457,700[1]
Ideology


  • Social democracy[2][3][4][5]

  • Pro-Europeanism



Political position
Centre-left[6]
European affiliation
Party of European Socialists
International affiliation

Progressive Alliance


European Parliament group
Progressive Alliance of Socialists and Democrats
Colors
     Red
Bundestag

153 / 709


Bundesrat

20 / 69


State Parliaments

516 / 1,821


European Parliament

27 / 96


Prime Ministers of States

7 / 16


Website

www.spd.de


  • Politics of Germany

  • Political parties

  • Elections



The Social Democratic Party of Germany (German: Sozialdemokratische Partei Deutschlands, SPD) is a social-democratic[2][3][4][5]political party in Germany. The party, led by Andrea Nahles since 2018, has become one of the two major contemporary political parties in Germany, along with the Christian Democratic Union (CDU). The SPD has governed at the federal level in Germany as part of a grand coalition with the CDU and the Christian Social Union (CSU) since December 2013 following the results of the 2013 and 2017 federal elections. The SPD participates in 14 state governments, seven of them governed by SPD Minister-Presidents, and as such holds the distinction of being the only political party in Germany represented in all sixteen Landtags.


The SPD is a member of the Party of European Socialists, and initiated the founding of the Progressive Alliance international for social-democratic parties on 22 May 2013,[7][8][9] after criticising the Socialist International for its acceptance of authoritarian parties. Established in 1863, the SPD is by far the oldest extant political party represented in the German Parliament and was one of the first Marxist-influenced parties in the world.



Contents




  • 1 History


  • 2 Party platform


    • 2.1 Internal factions




  • 3 Base of support


    • 3.1 Social structure


    • 3.2 Geographic distribution




  • 4 Election results


    • 4.1 General German elections


    • 4.2 European Parliament




  • 5 Leadership of the Social Democratic Party


  • 6 See also


  • 7 References


  • 8 Further reading


  • 9 External links





History




Membership development after 1945



The General German Workers' Association (Allgemeiner Deutscher Arbeiterverein, ADAV), founded in 1863, and the Social Democratic Workers' Party (Sozialdemokratische Arbeiterpartei Deutschlands, SDAP), founded in 1869, merged in 1875, under the name Socialist Workers' Party of Germany (Sozialistische Arbeiterpartei Deutschlands, SAPD). From 1878 to 1890, any grouping or meeting that aimed at spreading socialist principles was banned under the Anti-Socialist Laws, but the party still gained support in elections. In 1890, when the ban was lifted and it could again present electoral lists, the party adopted its current name. In the years leading up to World War I, the party remained ideologically radical in official principle, although many party officials tended to be moderate in everyday politics. By 1912, the party claimed the most votes of any German party.


Despite the agreement of the Second International to oppose the First World War, the SPD voted in favor of war in 1914. In response to this and the Bolshevik Revolution, members of the left and of the far-left of the SPD formed alternative parties, first the Spartacus League, then the Independent Social Democratic Party of Germany (USPD) while the more conservative faction was known as the Majority Social Democratic Party of Germany (MSPD) After 1918 the SPD played an important role in the political system of the Weimar Republic, although it took part in coalition governments only in few years (1918–21, 1923, 1928–30). Adolf Hitler prohibited the party in 1933 under the Enabling Act – party officials were imprisoned, killed or went into exile. In exile, the party used the name Sopade. The SPD had been the only party to vote against the Enabling Act (while the Communist Party was blocked from voting).


In 1945, the allied occupants in the Western zones initially allowed four parties to be established, which led to the Christian Democratic Union, the Free Democratic Party, the Communist Party of Germany, and the SPD being established. In the Soviet Zone of Occupation, the Soviets forced the Social Democrats to form a common party with the Communists (Socialist Unity Party of Germany or SED). In the Western zones, the Communist Party was later (1956) banned by West Germany's Federal Constitutional Court. Since 1949, in the Federal Republic of Germany, the SPD has been one of the two major parties, with the other being the Christian Democratic Union. From 1969 to 1982 and 1998 to 2005 the Chancellors of Germany were Social Democrats whereas the other years the Chancellors were Christian Democrats.



Party platform























The SPD was established as a Marxist party in 1875. However, the SPD underwent a major shift in policies reflected in the differences between the Heidelberg Program of 1925, which "called for the transformation of the capitalist system of private ownership of the means of production to social ownership",[10] and the Godesberg Program of 1959, which aimed to broaden its voter base and move its political position toward the centre.[11] After World War II, under the leadership of Kurt Schumacher, the SPD re-established itself as a socialist party, representing the interests of the working class and the trade unions. With the Godesberg Program of 1959, however, the party evolved from a socialist working-class party to a modern social-democratic party working within capitalism.





Sigmar Gabriel, Vice-Chancellor of Germany (2013-2018), former chairman of SPD.


The current party platform of the SPD espouses the goal of social democracy, which is seen as a vision of a societal arrangement in which freedom and social justice are paramount. According to the party platform, freedom, justice, and social solidarity, form the basis of social democracy. The coordinated social market economy should be strengthened, and its output should be distributed fairly. The party sees that economic system as necessary in order to ensure the affluence of the entire population. The SPD also tries to protect the society's poor with a welfare state. Concurrently, it advocates a sustainable fiscal policy that doesn't place a burden on future generations while eradicating budget deficits. In social policy, the SPD stands for civil and political rights in an open society. In foreign policy, the SPD aims at ensuring global peace by balancing global interests with democratic means. Thus, European integration is one of the main priorities of the SPD. SPD supports economic regulations to limit potential losses for banks and people. They support a common European economic and financial policy, and to prevent speculative bubbles. They support environmentally sustainable growth.[12]



Internal factions


The SPD is mostly composed of members belonging to either of the two main wings: Keynesian social democrats and Third Way moderate social democrats belonging to the Seeheimer Kreis. While the more moderate Seeheimer Kreis generally support the Agenda 2010 programs introduced by Chancellor Gerhard Schröder, the Keynesian social democrats continue to defend classical left-wing policies and the welfare state. The classical left-wing of the SPD claims that in recent years the welfare state has been curtailed through reform programs such as the Agenda 2010, Hartz IV and the more economic liberal stance of the SPD, which were endorsed by centrist social democrats.[citation needed] As a reaction to the Agenda 2010, there was in 2005 the ascension of an inner party dissident movement, which led ultimately to the foundation of the new party Labour and Social Justice – The Electoral Alternative (Arbeit & soziale Gerechtigkeit – Die Wahlalternative, WASG). The WASG was later merged into the party Die Linke ("The Left") in 2007.[13]



Base of support



Social structure


Before World War II, as the main non-revolutionary left-wing party, the Social Democrats fared best among non-Catholic workers as well as intellectuals favouring social progressive causes and increased economic equality. Led by Kurt Schumacher after World War II, the SPD initially opposed both the social market economy and Konrad Adenauer's drive towards western integration fiercely, but after Schumacher's death, it accepted the social market economy and Germany's position in the Western alliance in order to appeal to a broader range of voters. It still remains associated with the economic causes of unionised employees and working class voters. In the 1990s, the left and moderate wings of the party drifted apart, culminating in a secession of a significant number of party members, which later joined the socialist party WASG, which later merged into The Left (Die Linke) party.



Geographic distribution


Geographically, much of the SPD's current-day support comes from large cities, especially of northern and western Germany and Berlin. The metropolitan area of the Ruhr Area, where coal mining and steel production were once the biggest sources of revenues, have provided a significant base for the SPD in the 20th century. In the state Free Hanseatic City of Bremen the SPD has governed without interruption since 1949. In southern Germany, the SPD typically garners less support except in the largest cities. At the 2009 federal election, the party lost its only constituency in the entire state of Bavaria (in Munich). Small town and rural support comes especially from the traditionally Protestant areas of northern Germany and Brandenburg (with notable exceptions such as Western Pomerania where CDU leader Angela Merkel was re-elected in 2005) and a number of university towns. A striking example of the general pattern is the traditionally Catholic Emsland, where the Social Democrats generally gain a low percentage of votes, whereas the Reformed Protestant region of East Frisia directly to the north, with its strong traditional streak of Anti-Catholicism, is one of their strongest constituencies. Further south, the SPD also enjoys solid support in northern Hesse (Hans Eichel was mayor of Kassel, then Hesse's minister president, then finance minister in the Schröder administration, while Brigitte Zypries served as Justice Minister), parts of Palatinate (Kurt Beck was party leader until 7 September 2008), and the Saarland (political home of one-time candidate for federal chancellor Oskar Lafontaine, defected from the SPD in 2005).



Election results



General German elections


The SPD, at times called SAPD, participated in general elections determining the members of parliament. For the elections until 1933 the parliament was called Reichstag, except of the one of 1919, called National Assembly, and after 1949 it was called Bundestag. Note that changes in borders (1871, 1919, 1920, 1949, 1957 and 1990) varied the number of eligible voters, whereas electoral laws also changed the ballot system (only constituencies [till 1912], only party lists [till 1949], mixed system [thereafter]), the suffrage (women vote since 1919), the number of seats (fixed or flexible) and the length of the legislative period (three or four years). Lacking are entries for general elections before 1875, when labour parties unified to only form the SPD (then SAPD, current name since 1890), and under Nazi rule or communist rule, when candidates who identified with the SPD were banned at all from running for votes and seats.

















































































































































































































































































































































































Election year
# of
constituency votes
# of
party list votes
% of
overall votes (till 1912) /
party list votes (as of 1919)
# of
overall seats won
+/–
Government

1877
493,447

9.1 (#4)


13 / 397



in opposition

1878
437,158

7.6 (#5)


9 / 397



Decrease 4
in opposition

1881
311,961

6.1 (#7)


13 / 397



Increase 4
in opposition

1884
549,990

9.7 (#5)


24 / 397



Increase 11
in opposition

1887
763,102

10.1 (#5)


11 / 397



Decrease 13
in opposition

1890
1,427,323

19.7 (#1)


35 / 397



Increase 24
in opposition

1893
1,786,738

23.3 (#1)


44 / 397



Increase 9
in opposition

1898
2,107,076

27.2 (#1)


56 / 397



Increase 12
in opposition

1903
3,010,771

31.7 (#1)


81 / 397



Increase 25
in opposition

1907
3,259,029

28.9 (#1)


43 / 397



Decrease 38
in opposition

1912
4,250,399

34.8 (#1)


110 / 397



Increase 67
in opposition
in coalition
in coalition

1919

11,509,048
37.9 (#1)


165 / 423



Increase 55
in coalition

1920

6,179,991
21.9 (#1)


102 / 459



Decrease 63
in opposition
in coalition
in opposition
in coalition
in opposition

1924, May

6,008,905
20.5 (#1)


100 / 472



Decrease 2
in opposition

1924, December

7,881,041
26.0 (#1)


131 / 493



Increase 31
in opposition

1928

9,152,979
29.8 (#1)


153 / 491



Increase 22
in coalition

1930

8,575,244
24.5 (#1)


143 / 577



Decrease 10
in opposition

1932, July

7,959,712
21.6 (#2)


133 / 608



Decrease 10
in opposition

1932, November

7,247,901
20.4 (#2)


121 / 584



Decrease 12
in opposition

1933, March

7,181,629
18.3 (#2)


120 / 667



Decrease 1
in opposition

1949

6,934,975
29.2 (#2)


131 / 402



Increase 11
in opposition

1953
8,131,257
7,944,943
28.8 (#2)


162 / 509



Increase 22
in opposition

1957
11,975,400
11,875,339
31.8 (#2)


181 / 519



Increase 19
in opposition

1961
11,672,057
11,427,355
36.2 (#2)


203 / 521



Increase 22
in opposition

1965
12,998,474
12,813,186
39.3 (#2)


217 / 518



Increase 14
in coalition

1969
14,402,374
14,065,716
42.7 (#2)


237 / 518



Increase 20
in coalition

1972
18,228,239
17,175,169
45.8 (#1)


242 / 518



Increase 5
in coalition

1976
16,471,321
16,099,019
42.6 (#2)


224 / 518



Decrease 18
in coalition

1980
16,808,861
16,260,677
42.9 (#2)


228 / 519



Increase 4
in coalition

1983
15,686,033
14,865,807
38.2 (#2)


202 / 520



Decrease 26
in opposition

1987
14,787,953
14,025,763
37.0 (#2)


193 / 519



Decrease 9
in opposition

1990
16,279,980
15,545,366
33.5 (#2)


239 / 662



Increase 46
in opposition

1994
17,966,813
17,140,354
36.4 (#2)


252 / 672



Increase 13
in opposition

1998
21,535,893
20,181,269
40.9 (#1)


298 / 669



Increase 43
in coalition

2002
20,059,967
18,484,560
38.5 (#1)[14]


251 / 603



Decrease 47
in coalition

2005
18,129,100
16,194,665
34.2 (#2)


222 / 614



Decrease 29
in coalition

2009
12,077,437
9,988,843
23.0 (#2)


146 / 622



Decrease 76
in opposition

2013
12,835,933
11,247,283
25.7 (#2)


193 / 630



Increase 42
in coalition

2017
11,426,613
9,538,367
20.5 (#2)


153 / 709



Decrease 40
in coalition


European Parliament


































































Election year
# of
overall votes
% of
overall vote
# of
overall seats won
+/–

1979
11,370,045
40.8 (#1)


33 / 81




1984
9,296,417
37.4 (#2)


32 / 81



Decrease 1

1989
10,525,728
37.3 (#1)


30 / 81



Decrease 2

1994
11,389,697
32.2 (#1)


40 / 99



Increase 10

1999
8,307,085
30.7 (#2)


33 / 99



Decrease 7

2004
5,547,971
21.5 (#2)


23 / 99



Decrease 10

2009
5,472,566
20.8 (#2)


23 / 99



Steady 0

2014
7,999,955
27.2 (#2)


27 / 96



Increase 4


Leadership of the Social Democratic Party


The Party is led by the Leader of the Social Democratic Party, he/she is supported by 6 Deputy Leaders and the Party Executive.


The current leader is Andrea Nahles. The current Deputy Leaders are Manuela Schwesig, Ralf Stegner, Olaf Scholz, Thorsten Schäfer-Gümbel, Natascha Kohnen and Malu Dreyer


As Germany is a Federal Republic, each of Germany's States have their own SPD Party at the state level. The current Leaders of the SPD state parties are:









































































































State
Leader
Seats
Government

Baden-Württemberg

Leni Breymaier


19 / 143


in opposition

Bavaria

Natascha Kohnen


42 / 180


in opposition

Berlin

Michael Müller


38 / 160


in coalition

Brandenburg

Dietmar Woidke


30 / 88


in coalition

Bremen

Sascha Karolin Aulepp


30 / 83


in coalition

Hamburg

Olaf Scholz


58 / 121


in coalition

Hesse

Thorsten Schäfer-Gümbel


37 / 110


in opposition

Lower Saxony

Stephan Weil


55 / 137


in coalition

Mecklenburg-Vorpommern

Manuela Schwesig


26 / 71


in coalition

North Rhine-Westphalia

Michael Groschek


69 / 199


in opposition

Rhineland-Palatinate

Roger Lewentz


39 / 101


in coalition

Saarland

Heiko Maas


17 / 51


in coalition

Saxony

Martin Dulig


18 / 126


in coalition

Saxony-Anhalt

Burkhard Lischka


11 / 87


in coalition

Schleswig-Holstein

Ralf Stegner


21 / 73


in opposition

Thuringia

Andreas Bausewein


13 / 91


in coalition


See also




  • Politics of Germany

  • Party finance in Germany

  • List of political parties in Germany


  • Bundestag (Federal Assembly of Germany)

  • Weimar Republic

  • Mierscheid Law

  • Elections in the Free State of Prussia



References





  1. ^ "Mitgliederzahl". DPA. Retrieved 2018-07-07. 


  2. ^ ab Nordsieck, Wolfram (2017). "Germany". Parties and Elections in Europe. 


  3. ^ ab Merkel, Wolfgang; Petring, Alexander; Henkes, Christian; Egle, Christoph (2008). Social Democracy in Power: the capacity to reform. London: Taylor & Francis. ISBN 0-415-43820-9. 


  4. ^ ab Almeida, Dimitri (2012). The Impact of European Integration on Political Parties: Beyond the Permissive Consensus. CRC Press. p. 71. ISBN 978-1-136-34039-0. Retrieved 14 July 2013. 


  5. ^ ab Ashley Lavelle (2013). The Death of Social Democracy: Political Consequences in the 21st Century. Ashgate Publishing, Ltd. p. 7. ISBN 978-1-4094-9872-8. Retrieved 18 July 2013. 


  6. ^ "Greek debt crisis: Violence in Athens ahead of Germany vote". BBC News Online. 26 February 2015. Retrieved 26 February 2015. 


  7. ^ "Progressive Alliance: Sozialdemokraten gründen weltweites Netzwerk". SPIEGEL ONLINE. Hamburg, Germany. 22 May 2013. Retrieved 10 May 2015. 


  8. ^ Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung GmbH (22 May 2013). "Sozialdemokratie: "Progressive Alliance" gegründet". FAZ.NET. Retrieved 10 May 2015. 


  9. ^ n-tv Nachrichtenfernsehen (22 May 2013). "Sozialistische Internationale hat ausgedient: SPD gründet "Progressive Alliance"". n-tv.de. Retrieved 10 May 2015. 


  10. ^ Brustein, William. Logic of Evil: The Social Origins of the Nazi Party 1925–1933. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 1996. p. 131.


  11. ^ Cooper, Alice Holmes. Paradoxes of Peace: German Peace Movements since 1945. Ann Arbor, MI: University of Michigan Press, 1996. p. 85


  12. ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2012-10-29. Retrieved 2012-10-28. 


  13. ^ Nils Schnelle: Die WASG – Von der Gründung bis zur geplanten Fusion mit der Linkspartei, Munich 2007.


  14. ^ http://edition.cnn.com/2002/WORLD/europe/09/23/germany.0700/




Further reading



  • Orlow, Dietrich. Common Destiny: A Comparative History of the Dutch, French, and German Social Democratic Parties, 1945–1969 (2000) online


  • Carl E. Schorske, German Social Democracy, 1905–1917: The Development of the Great Schism (Harvard University Press, 1955).

  • Vernon L. Lidtke, The Outlawed Party: Social Democracy in Germany, 1878–1890 (Princeton University Press, 1966).

  • Berlau, Abraham. German Social Democratic Party, 1914–1921 (Columbia University Press, 1949).

  • Maxwell, John Allen. "Social Democracy in a Divided Germany: Kurt Schumacher and the German Question, 1945-1952." Ph.D dissertation, West Virginia University, Morgantown, West Virginia, 1969.

  • McAdams, A. James. "Germany Divided: From the Wall to Reunification." Princeton University Press, 1992 and 1993.

  • Erich Matthias, The Downfall of the Old Social Democratic Party in 1933 pages 51–105 from Republic to Reich The Making of the Nazi Revolution Ten Essays edited by Hajo Holborn, (New York: Pantheon Books, 1972).

  • Eric D. Weitz, Creating German Communism, 1890-1990: From Popular Protests to Socialist State. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1997

  • David Priestand, Red Flag: A History of Communism," New York: Grove Press, 2009



External links








  • Official website (in German)


  • History of the German social-democratic party from Lassalle to Kautsky, by fractal-vortex










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