Volkskammer

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Template:Short description Template:Use dmy dates Template:Infobox legislature Template:Politics of East Germany The Volkskammer ({{#invoke:IPA|main}}, "People's Chamber") was the supreme power organ of East Germany. It was the only branch of government in the state, and per the principle of unified power, all state organs were subservient to it.

The Volkskammer was initially the lower house of a bicameral legislature. The upper house was the Chamber of States, or Länderkammer, but in 1952 the states of East Germany were dissolved, and the Chamber of States was abolished in 1958. Constitutionally, the Volkskammer was the highest organ of state power in the GDR, and both constitutions vested it with great lawmaking powers. All other branches of government, including the judiciary, were responsible to it. By 1960, the chamber appointed the State Council (the GDR's collective head of state), the Council of Ministers (the GDR's government), and the National Defence Council (the GDR's collective military leadership).

In practice, however, it was a rubber stamp parliament that did little more than ratify decisions already made by the SED Politburo. By the 1970s and before the Peaceful Revolution, the Volkskammer only met two to four times a year.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>

MembershipEdit

In October 1949 the Volksrat ("People's Council"), charged with drafting the Constitution of East Germany, proclaimed itself the Volkskammer and requested official recognition as a national legislature from the Soviet Military Administration in Germany. This was granted by Soviet Deputy Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko. The Volkskammer then convened with the Länderkammer to elect Wilhelm Pieck as the first President of East Germany and Otto Grotewohl as the first Prime Minister of East Germany.<ref>Naimark, Norman M. The Russians In Germany: a History of the Soviet Zone of Occupation, 1945-1949. E-book, Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 1995</ref>

From its founding in 1949 until the first competitive elections in March 1990, all members of the Volkskammer were elected via a single list from the National Front, a popular front/electoral alliance dominated by the SED. In addition, seats were also allocated to various organizations affiliated with the SED, such as the Free German Youth. Effectively, the SED held control over the composition of the Volkskammer.<ref>Kurt Sontheimer & Wilhelm Bleek. The Government and Politics of East Germany. New York: St. Martin's Press. 1975. p. 66.</ref> In any event, the minor parties in the National Front were largely subservient to the SED, and were required to accept the SED's "leading role" as a condition of their continued existence.<ref>Andreas Malchya: Der Ausba des neuen Systems 1949 bis 1961, Bundeszentrale für politische Bildung, last retrieved 2022-07-28.</ref>

The members of the People's Chamber were elected in multi-member constituencies, with four to eight seats. To be elected, a candidate needed to receive half of the valid votes cast in their constituency. If, within a constituency, an insufficient number of candidates got the majority needed to fill all the seats, a second round was held within 90 days. If the number of candidates getting this majority exceeds the number of seats in the respective constituency, the order of the candidates on the election list decided who got to sit in the Volkskammer. Candidates who lost out on a seat because of this would become successor candidates who would fill casual vacancies which might occur during a legislative period.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

Only one list of candidates appeared on a ballot paper; voters simply took the ballot paper and dropped it into the ballot box. Those who wanted to vote against the National Front list had to vote using a separate ballot box, without any secrecy.<ref>Template:Cite bookTemplate:Page needed</ref> The table below shows an overview of the reported results of all parliamentary elections before 1990, with the resulting disposition of parliamentary seats.

Election Turnout Agree Distribution of parliamentary seats
SED CDU LDPD DBD NDPD FDGB FDJ KB DFD SPD VdgB VVN
1950 98.53% 99.9% 110 67 66 33 35 49 25 24 20 6 12 19
1954 98.51% 99.4% 117 52 52 52 52 53 29 29 18 12
1958 98.90% 99.9% 117 52 52 52 52 53 29 29 18 12
1963 99.25% 99.9% 127 52 52 52 52 68 40 35 22
1967 99.82% 99.9% 127 52 52 52 52 68 40 35 22
1971 98.48% 99.5% 127 52 52 52 52 68 40 35 22
1976 98.58% 99.8% 127 52 52 52 52 68 40 35 22
1981 99.21% 99.9% 127 52 52 52 52 68 40 35 22
1986 99.74% 99.9% 127 52 52 52 52 68 37 21 32 14

In 1976, the Volkskammer moved into a specially constructed building on Marx-Engels-Platz (now Schloßplatz again), the Palace of the Republic (Palast der Republik). Prior to this, the Volkskammer met at Template:Ill in the Mitte district of Berlin.

Initially, voters in East Berlin could not take part in elections to the Volkskammer, in which they were represented by indirectly elected non-voting members, but in 1979 the electoral law was changed to provide for 66 directly elected deputies with full voting rights.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>

With the advent of the Peaceful revolution, a new electoral law was passed on 20 February 1990, reducing the Volkskammer to 400 members and establishing their competitive election using party-list proportional representation, with no electoral threshold. Seats were calculated nationally using the largest remainder method, and distributed in multi-member constituencies corresponding to the fifteen Bezirke.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Template:Sister project

After the 1990 election, the disposition of the parties was as follows:

Party/Group Acronym Members
Alliance for Germany CDU, DA, DSU 192
Social Democratic Party in the GDR SPD 88
Party of Democratic Socialism PDS, former SED 66
Association of Free DemocratsDFP, FDP, LDP 21
Alliance 90 B90 12
Green Party and Independent Women's Association Grüne, UFV 8
National Democratic Party of Germany NDPD 2
Democratic Women's League of Germany DFD 1
United Left VL 1

Presidents of the People's ChamberEdit

The president of the People's Chamber was the third-highest state post in the GDR (after the chairman of the Council of Ministers and the chairman of the State Council) and was the ex officio vice president during the existence of the office of president. As such, on two occasions, the president of the People's Chamber served as acting president for brief periods in 1949 and 1960. The last president of the People's Chamber, Sabine Bergmann-Pohl, was also interim head of state during the last six months of East Germany's existence due to the State Council having been abolished.

The presidency of the People's Chamber was held by a bloc party representative for most of that body's existence to keep up the appearance that the GDR was led by a broad coalition. Only one SED member ever held the post.

Name Entered office Left office Party
Johannes Dieckmann 7 October 1949 22 February 1969 LDPD
Gerald Götting 12 May 1969 29 October 1976 CDU
Horst Sindermann 29 October 1976 13 November 1989 SED
Günther Maleuda 13 November 1989 5 April 1990 DBD
Sabine Bergmann-Pohl 5 April 1990 2 October 1990 CDU

Parties and organizations representedEdit

National front partiesEdit

Party Emblem Flag Foundation Dissolution Seats in the Volkskammer (1986)
Socialist Unity Party
SED
File:Sozialistische Einheitspartei Deutschlands Logo.svg File:Flagge der SED.svg 21 April 1946 16 December 1989 127
Christian Democratic Union
CDU
File:Logo der CDU (DDR).svg File:Flagge der CDU (Ost).svg 26 June 1945 1/2 October 1990 52
Liberal Democratic Party
LDPD
File:LDPD Emblem.svg File:Flagge Liberal-Demokratische Partei Deutschlands.svg 5 July 1945 27 March 1990 52
Democratic Farmers' Party
DBD
File:Demokratische BauernPartei Deutschlands Logo.svg File:Flagge Demokratische Bauernpartei Deutschlands2.svg 17 June 1948 15 September 1990 52
National Democratic Party
NDPD
File:DEU NDPD Logo.svg File:Flagge der NDPD.svg 5 May 1948 27 March 1990 52

National front organizationsEdit

Organization Emblem Flag Foundation Dissolution Assigned representatives in the Volkskammer (1986)
Free German Trade Union Federation
FDGB
File:FDGB Emblem.svg File:Flagge FDGB.svg 1946 1990 61
Free German Youth
FDJ
File:Freie Deutsche Jugend.svg File:Flagge der Freie Deutsche Jugend.svg 1946 exists today 37
Democratic Women's League of Germany
DFD
File:DFD Logo.png File:Flagge Demokratischer Frauenbund Deutschlands.svg 1947 1990 32
Cultural Association of the DDR
KB
File:Logo Kulturbund der DDR.svg File:DDR Kulturbund flag.png 1945 1990 21
Peasants Mutual Aid Association
VdgB
File:Vereinigung der gegenseitigen Bauernhilfe (VdgB) Logo.svg File:Flagge VdgB.svg 1945 1994 14

Parties and organizations in the 1990 VolkskammerEdit

Party Emblem Foundation Dissolution Seats in the Volkskammer (1990 election)
Christian Democratic Union
CDU
File:Cdu-logo.svg 26 June 1945 1/2 October 1990 163
Social Democratic Party
SPD
File:SPD-DDR.svg 7 October 1989 26 September 1990 88
Party of Democratic Socialism
PDS
File:PDS-Logo.svg 16 December 1989 16 June 2007 66
German Social Union
DSU
File:Logo Deutsche Soziale Union.png 20 January 1990 exists today 25
Liberal Democratic Party
LDPD
File:LDPD Emblem.svg 5 July 1945 27 March 1990 10
Democratic Farmers' Party
DBD
File:Demokratische BauernPartei Deutschlands Logo.svg 17 June 1948 15 September 1990 9
Green Party
GP
File:Bundesarchiv Bild 183-1990-0208-015, Logo Grüne Partei der DDR.svg 9 February 1990 3 December 1990 8
German Forum Party
DFP
File:DFP Logo.png 27 January 1990 11 August 1990 7
New Forum
NF
File:NEUES FORUM Logo.jpg 9/10 September 1989 21 September 1991 7
Free Democratic Party
FDP
File:Freie Demokratische Partei (Logo, 1968-2001).png 4 February 1990 11 August 1990 4
Democratic Awakening
DA
File:DemokratischerAufbruch.svg 29 October 1989 4 August 1990 4
Democracy Now
DJ
File:Bundesarchiv Bild 183-1990-0209-022, Logo Demokratie jetzt.jpg 12 September 1989 21 September 1991 3
National Democratic Party
NDPD
File:DEU NDPD Logo.svg 5 May 1948 27 March 1990 2
Initiative for Peace and Human Rights
IFM
File:Initiative für Frieden und Menschenrechte.svg 24 January 1986 21 September 1991 2
Democratic Women's League of Germany
DFD
File:DFD Logo.png 8 March 1947 26 October 1990 1
United Left
VL
File:Vereinigte Linke Emblem.svg 2 October 1989 1992 1

ResultsEdit

1949 East German Constitutional Assembly election (first)Edit

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1986 East German general election (final under the SED)Edit

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1990 East German general election (final)Edit

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See alsoEdit

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NotesEdit

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ReferencesEdit

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External linksEdit

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