State government (Germany)

A Landesregierung (state government) is the government of a state (Land) in Germany. In Bavaria and Saxony, the state government is called the Staatsregierung (State Government), while in the city-states of Berlin, Bremen, and Hamburg, it is called the Senat (Senate).

Composition and function

The state government consists of the head of government and a specific number of ministers (or state ministers or senators). The legal status of the members of a state government is regulated in the Ministers Acts of the individual states.

The heads of government are called Minister-president in the area states, Governing Mayor in Berlin, President of the Senate and Mayor in Bremen, and First Mayor and President of the Senate in Hamburg. In the city-states, the senates function simultaneously as the state government and as the municipal administration.[1]

The number and areas of responsibility of the ministers vary from state to state; they are either prescribed in the state constitutions, determined by a special law, or established by the Minister-president at their discretion. In Baden-Württemberg, Bavaria, Bremen, the Saarland, and Saxony, the state government may include other members in addition to the ministers or senators (such as state secretaries with voting rights).

State governments are responsible for executing most federal laws in addition to their own state laws, maintaining jurisdiction over areas such as police, education, and cultural affairs.[1] Decisions made by a state government initially usually have only political significance and often require further steps. For example, a draft law proposed by the government must be debated in the respective state parliament. Depending on the statutory provisions, legal ordinances and administrative regulations can be issued by the state government or an individual minister. In the interest of cooperation between ministers, such decrees are often preceded by a decision of the state government, even if this is not formally required by law.

System of government

In terms of state or governmental form, all German states are currently parliamentary republics. This means that the government of each state (executive) is principally dependent on the confidence of a parliament elected by the people (legislature) at the state level.

The constitutional framework conditions for this form of government are mandatorily prescribed by federal constitutional law, specifically the so-called homogeneity principle of the Basic Law for the Federal Republic of Germany (Article 28 of the Basic Law for the Federal Republic of Germany). The Basic Law guarantees the states "considerable autonomy" to prevent the centralization of power that characterized the Nazi era.[2] However, the specific organizational structure of the system of government is not dictated by this, meaning that the principle basically allows for a presidential form of government or other forms of democratic state order and their variants in the states. The determination of the rules by which the state organs are formed, and what functions and competencies they possess, is principally a matter for the states and is subject to the regulations of the state constitutions.

State governments also play a direct role in federal legislation. They appoint members to the Bundesrat (Federal Council), the upper house of the federal legislature, allowing them to participate in the legislative process and administration at the national level.[2][1]

Current state governments

The following is a list of heads of government of the sixteen states of Germany.

State Portrait Head of government[a]
Date of birth
Party Took office Time in office Last election Next election Current cabinet


Baden-Württemberg
Winfried Kretschmann
(1948-05-17) 17 May 1948
Greens 12 May 2011 14 years, 316 days 2021 2026 Kretschmann III
  


Bavaria
Markus Söder
(1967-01-05) 5 January 1967
CSU 16 March 2018 8 years, 8 days 2023 2028 Söder III
  


Berlin
Governing Mayor
Kai Wegner
(1972-09-15) 15 September 1972
CDU 27 April 2023 2 years, 331 days 2023 2026 Wegner
  


Brandenburg
Dietmar Woidke
(1961-10-22) 22 October 1961
SPD 28 August 2013 12 years, 208 days 2024 2029 Woidke IV
  


Bremen
President of the Senate and Mayor
Andreas Bovenschulte
(1965-08-11) 11 August 1965
SPD 15 August 2019 6 years, 221 days 2023 2027 Bovenschulte II
   


Hamburg
First Mayor
Peter Tschentscher
(1966-01-20) 20 January 1966
SPD 28 March 2018 7 years, 361 days 2025 2030 Tschentscher III
  


Hesse
Boris Rhein
(1972-01-02) 2 January 1972
CDU 31 May 2022 3 years, 297 days 2023 2028 Rhein II
  


Lower Saxony
Olaf Lies
(1967-05-08) 8 May 1967
SPD 20 May 2025 308 days 2022 2027 Lies
  


Mecklenburg-Vorpommern
Manuela Schwesig
(1974-05-23) 23 May 1974
SPD 4 July 2017 8 years, 263 days 2021 2026 Schwesig II
  


North Rhine-Westphalia
Hendrik Wüst
(1975-07-19) 19 July 1975
CDU 27 October 2021 4 years, 148 days 2022 2027 Wüst II
  


Rhineland-Palatinate
Alexander Schweitzer
(1973-09-17) 17 September 1973
SPD 10 July 2024 1 year, 257 days 2021 2026 Schweitzer
   


Saarland
Anke Rehlinger
(1976-04-06) 6 April 1976
SPD 25 April 2022 3 years, 333 days 2022 2027 Rehlinger
 


Saxony
Michael Kretschmer
(1975-05-07) 7 May 1975
CDU 13 December 2017 8 years, 101 days 2024 2029 Kretschmer III
  


Saxony-Anhalt
Sven Schulze
(1979-07-31) 31 July 1979
CDU 28 January 2026 55 days 2021 2026 Schulze
   


Schleswig-Holstein
Daniel Günther
(1973-07-24) 24 July 1973
CDU 28 June 2017 8 years, 269 days 2022 2027 Günther II
  


Thuringia
Mario Voigt
(1977-02-08) 8 February 1977
CDU 12 December 2024 1 year, 102 days 2024 2029 Voigt
   

Historical overview of all state governments

The structure and authority of state governments in Germany have evolved significantly through four major historical phases.

German Empire (1871–1918)

Following the Unification of Germany in 1871, the German Empire was established as a federal state comprising 25 sovereign entities (kingdoms, duchies, and city-states). The system was characterized by a "functional division" of power: while the Imperial government enacted legislation, the administration and implementation of these laws remained the exclusive domain of the state governments.[3] This period was marked by the dominance of Prussia, comprising two-thirds of the territory, where the Prussian Prime Minister frequently served simultaneously as the Imperial Chancellor.[3]

Weimar Republic (1919–1933)

The Weimar Constitution of 1919 officially introduced the term Länder (lands/states) for the constituent republics. While maintaining a federal structure, the Weimar Republic centralized significant powers, particularly financial sovereignty. Unlike in the Empire, the federal government took over tax collection, leaving state governments dependent on federal grants for funding.[3]

Nazi Era (1933–1945)

State governments were effectively stripped of their sovereignty during the Nazi era through the policy of Gleichschaltung (coordination). The "Law on the Reconstruction of the Reich" (1934) abolished the state parliaments and transferred sovereign rights to the central government, reducing the states to administrative provinces headed by centrally appointed Reichsstatthalter (Reich Governors).[4]

Federal Republic (1949–present)

After World War II, the Basic Law (1949) restored the federal order as a safeguard against central authoritarianism. The Western Allies reorganized state borders to create viable economic units, resulting in the formation of new states like North Rhine-Westphalia and Baden-Württemberg (merged in 1952).[3] Upon German reunification in 1990, the five states of the former East Germany (which had been abolished in 1952 in favor of centralized districts) were reconstituted and joined the Federal Republic, bringing the total number of state governments to sixteen.[2]

Overview of the Minister-Presidents

Women as chairpersons of state governments

So far, nine women have chaired a state government in Germany. However, only three of them, Hannelore Kraft, Franziska Giffey, and Anke Rehlinger, won the office through a lead candidacy in a general election. Five were elected by the respective parliamentary majorities following the resignation of the incumbents, and one held the office in an acting capacity.

The first woman to lead the government of a German state was Louise Schroeder (SPD), who led the Berlin Magistrate in an acting capacity from 18 August 1947 to 7 December 1948, because the originally elected Lord Mayor was not confirmed by the Allied Kommandatura (see also Magistrate Schroeder).

Heide Simonis (SPD) was first elected Minister-President of Schleswig-Holstein in 1993 and remained in office until 2005 (see also Cabinet Simonis I, II, and III). Since the election of Christine Lieberknecht (CDU) as Minister-President of Thuringia (see also Cabinet Lieberknecht) in 2009, women have continuously headed at least one state government.

Currently (2024), two women head a state government as Minister-Presidents: in Mecklenburg-Vorpommern, Manuela Schwesig since July 2017, and in Saarland, Anke Rehlinger since April 2022 (see also Cabinet Schwesig I and II as well as Cabinet Rehlinger).

The proportion of women among the chairpersons of the 16 state governments reached 25 percent for the first time in 2013 and from 2022 to 2023; it thus came significantly closer within a few years to the proportion of women in the 16 state parliaments, which ranges between 18.8 percent (Baden-Württemberg[5]) and around 40 percent (Bremen,[6] Brandenburg[7]) and averages around one-third of the deputies. Since the 1990s, the proportions of women in the individual state parliaments have risen significantly.[8]

With two out of seven, the proportion of women among SPD Minister-Presidents has been 28.6 percent since July 2024. The CDU in six federal states, the CSU in Bavaria, The Left in Thuringia, and Alliance 90/The Greens in Baden-Württemberg do not currently field a woman from their ranks for the top office of the state governments led by them.

Women as Minister-Presidents of German states
Period 1947–1948 1948–1993 1993–2005 2005–2009 2009–2010 2010–2011 2011–2013 2013–2014 2014–2017 2017 2017–2018 2018–2021 2021–2022 2022–2023 2023–2024 since 2024
Minister-Presidents/
Term(s) of office
Louise Schroeder (SPD)
1947–1948
Heide Simonis (SPD)
1993–1996; 1996–2000;
2000–2005
Christine Lieberknecht (CDU)
2009–2014
rowspan="2"| Manuela Schwesig (SPD)
2017–2021; 2021–
Hannelore Kraft (SPD)
2010–2012; 2012–2017
rowspan="2"| Franziska Giffey (SPD)
2021–2023
Annegret Kramp-Karrenbauer (CDU)
2011–2012; 2012–2017; 2017–2018
colspan="3"  style="background:#FFC1C1;"| Anke Rehlinger (SPD)
2022–
colspan="8" style="background:#FFC1C1;"| Malu Dreyer (SPD)
2013–2016; 2016–2021; 2021–2024
Number of women serving simultaneously 1 none 1 none 1 2 3 4 3 2 3 2 3 4 3 2
Percentage of women among Minister-Presidents
of all 16 states (different
number of states until 1990)
5.9 % 0 % 6.3 % 0 % 6.3 % 12.5 % 18.8 % 25.0 % 18.8 % 12.5 % 18.8 % 12.5 % 18.8 % 25.0 % 18.8 % 12.5 %

See also

  • Evangelical Bureau
  • Catholic Bureau

Notes

  1. ^ All heads of government are styled "Minister-President" unless otherwise indicated.

References

  1. ^ a b c Oxford Reference 2024.
  2. ^ a b c Britannica 2024.
  3. ^ a b c d Renzsch 2017.
  4. ^ Dauke 2024.
  5. ^ Landtagsvizepräsidentin Lösch mahnt Verwirklichung der Chancengleichheit an. on: landtag-bw.de, retrieved 16 January 2013.
  6. ^ Archived (Date missing) at bremische-buergerschaft.de (Error: unknown archive URL) on: bremische-buergerschaft.de, retrieved 16 January 2013.
  7. ^ Archived (Date missing) at landtag.brandenburg.de (Error: unknown archive URL) (PDF; 1 MB)
  8. ^ 50 Jahre Frauen in der Politik: späte Erfolge, aber nicht am Ziel. Die politische Beteiligung von Frauen im Zeitverlauf. on: bpb.de, retrieved 16 January 2013.

Sources

  • "Germany". Encyclopædia Britannica. 2024. Retrieved 2024-01-01.
  • "Federalism". Oxford Reference. Oxford University Press. 2024. Retrieved 2024-01-01.
  • Renzsch, Wolfgang (2017). "The Long-Term Development of Federalism in Germany". 50 Shades of Federalism. Retrieved 2024-01-01.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: ref duplicates default (link)
  • Dauke, Eva (2024-05-23). "Anniversary of the German Basic Law – German Constitutions in the Course of Time". Library of Congress. Retrieved 2024-01-01.