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Die Neuwahl zur Hamburger Bürgerschaft vom 29. Februar 2004: die Hanseaten und Angela Merkel finden einen politischen Hoffnungsträger

  • Patrick Horst

    Research output: Journal contributionsJournal articlesResearch

    Abstract

    Germany's major federal opposition party, the Christian Democratic Union (CDU), started with an impressive victory in the "super election year" 2004. For the first time since World War II, the CDU won an absolute majority of seats in the state legislature of Hamburg. The city that had been governed for half a century (1946–53, 1957–2001) by Social Democrats. The outcome of this election had mainly local reasons: the aversion of many voters to Hamburg's former "Staatspartei" SPD which had to accept its worst post-World War II election result in the city; the vanishing of the populist "Schill Party" which had won 20 percent of the votes in 2001 and whose voters – after a series of political scandals – switched mostly to the CDU in 2004; and, finally, the overwhelming popularity of Mayor Ole von Beust (CDU). The stunning defeat of the SPD in Hamburg was aggravated by the negative image of the federal party which the voters held accountable for the unpopular political reforms of the federal government under the Social Democrat Gerhard Schröder. The leader of the opposition in Berlin, Angela Merkel (CDU), emerges from the Hamburg election stronger than ever.
    Original languageGerman
    JournalZeitschrift für Parlamentsfragen
    Volume35
    Issue number2
    Pages (from-to)252-270
    Number of pages19
    ISSN0340-1758
    Publication statusPublished - 2004

    Research areas and keywords

    • Politics

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