Saxony state election, 2004

The Saxony state election of 2004, was conducted on 19 September 2004, to elect members to the Landtag of Saxony.

Outcome

  • The most striking result of the election, gaining international attention, was the entrance into the Landtag of the nationalist (and quasi-national-socialist) NPD, which won 12 seats. Its strength was mostly in the rural areas. Commentators attributed the NPD's success to alienation stemming from economic depression.
  • The continuing strength in Saxony of the east-German communist SED's-successor party, the PDS, was also notable.
  • The CDU remained the strongest party with 55 of 124 seats, but lost its majority. This meant that it had to find coalition partners. The most logical was the free-market FDP. The FDP had won only 7 seats, though, which was just barely insufficient to form a CDU-FDP government. Coalition with the reformed-Communist PDS (which was later to merge into the Linke party) or with the left-wing Greens was ideologically impossible. The CDU could have, mathematically, formed a government with the far-right NPD (which gained 12 seats), but this too was out of the question. The result was a much-bemoaned grand coalition of the two centrist-parties (CDU and SPD). This grand-coalition outcome was later mirrored nationally in the 2005 Bundestag elections.
  • Georg Milbradt remained in office as Prime Minister. Notably however, the far-right NPD received two more votes on the ballot for Prime Minister than it had members in the Landtag. It is presumed that two CDU Landtag members backed the NPD, as a protest against the grand coalition.

Results

 Summary of the 19 September 2004 election results for the Landtag of Saxony
Party Ideology Vote % (change) Seats (change) Seat %
Christian Democratic Union (CDU) Centre-right 41.1% −15.8% 55 −21 44.4%
Party of Democratic Socialism (PDS) [Now Die Linke] Left-wing[1] 23.6% +1.4% 31 +1 25.0%
Social Democratic Party (SPD) Centre-left 9.8% −0.9% 13 −1 10.5%
National Democratic Party (NPD) Far-right, ultranationalist 9.2% +7.8% 12 +12 9.7%
Free Democratic Party (FDP) Free Market 5.9% +4.8% 7 +7 5.6%
Alliance '90/The Greens (Die Grünen) Environmental, Centre-left 5.1% +2.5% 6 +6 4.8%
Animal Protection Party (Tierschutzpartei) Animal welfare 1.6% +1.6%
Gray Panthers (Graue) Pensioner's advocacy 0.9% +0.6%
Party of Bible-Loyal Christians (PBC) Religious, far-right 0.7% +0.4%
Civil Rights Movement Solidarity (BüSo) LaRouche movement 0.5% +0.4%
Party for Rights, Freedom, Health (AUFBRUCH) Environmental 0.5% +0.5%
German Social Union (DSU) Conservative 0.5% +0.1%
Others 0.4% -3.1%
Total 100.0%   124 +4 100.0%

Turnout was at 59.6%, down from 61.1% in the 1999 election.

Seat results -- SPD in red, CDU in black, PDS in purple, Greens in green, FDP in yellow, NPD in brown

Turnout was at 59.6%, a decline of 1.5% from the previous elections.

See also

Notes

  1. "Parties and Elections in Europe: Germany". Parties-and-Elections.de. 2009. Retrieved 2010-06-18.

Sources

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