1957 West German federal election

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1957 West German federal election
Registered 35,400,923 Increase 6.9%
Turnout 31,072,894 (87.8%) Increase 1.8pp
  First party Second party
 
Konrad Adenauer - 7. CDU-Bundesparteitag-kasf0031 (cropped).JPG
Gedenktafel Trautenauer Str 6 (Karlh) Erich Ollenhauer (cropped).jpg
Candidate Konrad Adenauer Erich Ollenhauer
Party CDU/CSU SPD
Last election 45.2%, 243 seats 28.8%, 151 seats
Seats won 270[b] 169[c]
Seat change Increase 27 Increase 18
Popular vote 15,008,399 9,495,571
Percentage 50.2% 31.8%
Swing Increase 5.0pp Increase 3.0pp

  Third party Fourth party
 

FDP

DP

Candidate Reinhold Maier Heinrich Hellwege
Party FDP DP
Last election 9.5%, 48 seats 3.3%, 15 seats
Seats won 41[d] 17
Seat change Decrease 7 Increase 2
Popular vote 2,307,135 1,007,282
Percentage 7.7% 3.4%
Swing Decrease 1.8pp Increase 0.1pp

1957 German federal election - Results by constituency.svg

The left side shows the winning party vote in the constituencies, the right side shows the seats won by parties in each of the states. The pie chart over West Berlin shows the partisan composition of its legislature.


Federal elections were held in West Germany on 15 September 1957 to elect the members of the third Bundestag. The Christian Democratic Union and its longtime ally, the Christian Social Union in Bavaria, won a sweeping victory, taking 270 seats in the Bundestag to win the first – and to date, only – absolute majority for a single German parliamentary group in a free election.

This was the first West German federal election to take place in the Saarland, which – as Saar protectorate – had been a separate entity under French control between 1946 and 1956.

Campaign[edit]

Economy[edit]

Federal Chancellor Konrad Adenauer had some solid advantages over his Social Democratic Party (SPD) opponent, Erich Ollenhauer; West Germany had become fully sovereign in 1955 and The Law on Pension Reform (backdated to 1 January 1957) was enormously popular when passed in the spring of 1957, while the economy had been growing on average 7% per year since 1953 in part due to young, skilled and highly educated workers immigrating from East Germany keeping productivity high and earnings growth low.[1] West Germany had joined the European Economic Community in March 1957. Its economy was growing steadily with very low unemployment, and most West Germans felt more prosperous and more secure than in 1949 or 1953. Although the West German economic growth was more directly enhanced by the social market economy policies of Economics Minister Ludwig Erhard, many West German voters gave Adenauer the credit for it.[2][3]

Defence[edit]

Although Adenauer had said that he would confine the Bundeswehr to conventional weapons, on 5 April he said “Tactical atomic weapons are nothing but the further development of artillery… it goes without saying that… we cannot dispense with having them for our troops… we must follow suit and have these new types – they are, after all, practically normal weapons.” On 12 April eighteen physicists from the Max Planck Institute released the Göttingen Manifesto calling on West Germany to not produce, test or use nuclear weapons. Adenauer at first tried to brush the matter aside, but under heavy criticism from the press decided instead to meet with five of the physicists in Bonn. After a seven-hour meeting a joint communique was issued saying “The Federal Republic will not produce its own nuclear weapons, and consequently the Federal Government has no reason to approach German nuclear scientists about their participation in the development of nuclear weapons.” The row continued, having been fuelled by an aggressive note from the Soviet Union in April and ended at the NATO Spring conference in May. Ultimately the row was too far away from the election itself to damage a surprisingly healthy looking Adenauer’s prospects.[1]

Results[edit]

The All-German Bloc lost all of their seats, but the ideologically similar German Party maintained theirs. The 1957 election was the last time that a right-wing populist party would return members to the Bundestag until Alternative for Germany’s entrance in 2017. The election also marked the last time until 1990 that any party other than CDU/CSU or SPD won any constituency seats.

Bundestag 1957.svg
Party Party-list Constituency Seats
Votes % Seats Votes % Seats Elected West Berlin Total +/–
Christian Democratic Union 11,875,339 39.71 68 11,975,400 39.71 147 215 7 222 +25
Social Democratic Party 9,495,571 31.75 123 9,651,669 32.01 46 169 12 181 +19
Christian Social Union 3,133,060 10.48 8 3,186,150 10.57 47 55 0 55 +2
Free Democratic Party 2,307,135 7.71 40 2,276,234 7.55 1 41 2 43 –10
All-German Bloc/League of Expellees and Deprived of Rights 1,374,066 4.59 0 1,324,636 4.39 0 0 0 0 –27
German Party 1,007,282 3.37 11 1,062,293 3.52 6 17 0 17 +2
Deutsche Reichspartei 308,564 1.03 0 290,622 0.96 0 0 0 0 0
Federalist Union 254,322 0.85 0 295,533 0.98 0 0 0 0 New
Bund der Deutschen 58,725 0.20 0 37,329 0.12 0 0 0 0 New
German Middle Class 36,592 0.12 0 3,024 0.01 0 0 0 0 New
South Schleswig Voters’ Association 32,262 0.11 0 33,463 0.11 0 0 0 0 0
German Community 17,490 0.06 0 16,410 0.05 0 0 0 0 New
Patriotic Union 5,020 0.02 0 2,250 0.01 0 0 0 0 0
Party of the Good Germans 356 0.00 0 0 0 0 0
Free German People’s Party 0 1 1 New
Independents and voter groups 845 0.00 0 0 0 0 0
Total 29,905,428 100.00 250 30,156,214 100.00 247 497 22 519 +10
Valid votes 29,905,428 96.24 30,156,214 97.05
Invalid/blank votes 1,167,466 3.76 916,680 2.95
Total votes 31,072,894 100.00 31,072,894 100.00
Registered voters/turnout 35,400,923 87.77 35,400,923 87.77
Source: Bundeswahlleiter

Results by state[edit]

Constituency seats[edit]

List seats[edit]

Aftermath[edit]

Konrad Adenauer led the CDU-CSU coalition to a landslide victory. The CDU-CSU won an outright majority—to date, the only time a German party has been elected to a majority government in a free election (the CDU and CSU sit as a single bloc in the Bundestag).

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b Charles Williams (2000) Adenauer: The Father of the New Germany, pp442–445
  2. ^ Erling Bjöl, Grimberg’s History of the Nations, volume 23: The Rich West, “A Giant Dwarf: West Germany,” Helsinki: WSOY, 1985
  3. ^ Dennis L. Bark and David R. Gress, A History of West Germany, volume 1: 1945–1963: From Shadow to Substance, London, UK: Basil Blackwell, 1989