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Christian Social Union in Bavaria





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The Christian Social Union in Bavaria (German: Christlich-Soziale Union in Bayern, CSU) is a Christian democratic[6][7] and conservative[7][8][9][10] political party in Germany. Having a regionalist identity,[11][12] the CSU operates only in Bavaria while its larger counterpart, the Christian Democratic Union (CDU), operates in the other fifteen states of Germany. It differs from the CDU by being somewhat more conservative in social matters, following Catholic social teaching.[13] The CSU is considered the de facto successor of the Weimar-era Catholic Bavarian People's Party.[14]

Christian Social Union in Bavaria
Christlich-Soziale Union in Bayern
AbbreviationCSU
LeaderMarkus Söder
Secretary GeneralMartin Huber
Founded1945; 79 years ago (1945)
Preceded byBavarian People's Party
(de facto)
HeadquartersMunich, Bavaria, Germany
NewspaperBayernkurier (1950–2019)
Youth wingYoung Union
Membership (2022)Decrease 132,000[1]
Ideology
  • Conservatism (German)
  • Regionalism
  • Political positionCentre-right[5]
    National affiliationCDU/CSU
    Regional affiliationGerman Social Union
    (1990–1993)
    European affiliationEuropean People's Party
    European Parliament groupEuropean People's Party
    International affiliationInternational Democracy Union
    Colours  Blue
    Bundestag
    43 / 116

    (Bavarian seats)
    Bundesrat
    4 / 6

    (Bavarian seats)
    Landtag of Bavaria
    85 / 205

    European Parliament
    6 / 96

    Heads of State Governments
    1 / 16

    Party flag
    Website
    www.csu.de Edit this at Wikidata
  • Political parties
  • Elections
  • At the federal level, the CSU forms a common faction in the Bundestag with the CDU which is frequently referred to as the Union Faction (die Unionsfraktion) or simply CDU/CSU. The CSU has 43 seats in the Bundestag since the 2021 federal election,[15] making it currently the second smallest of the seven parties represented. The CSU is a member of the European People's Party and the International Democrat Union.

    Party leader Markus Söder serves as Minister-President of Bavaria, a position that CSU representatives have held from 1946 to 1954 and again since 1957. From 1962 to 2008 and from 2013 to 2018, the CSU had the absolute majority in the Bavarian Landtag.

    History

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    Chairman Franz Josef Strauß in 1976

    Franz Josef Strauß (1915–1988) had left behind the strongest legacy as a leader of the party, having led the party from 1961 until his death in 1988. His political career in the federal cabinet was unique in that he had served in four ministerial posts in the years between 1953 and 1969. From 1978 until his death in 1988, Strauß served as the Minister-President of Bavaria. Strauß was the first leader of the CSU to be a candidate for the German chancellery in 1980. In the 1980 federal election, Strauß ran against the incumbent Helmut Schmidt of the Social Democratic Party of Germany (SPD) but lost thereafter as the SPD and the Free Democratic Party (FDP) managed to secure an absolute majority together, forming a social-liberal coalition.

    The CSU has led the Bavarian state government since it came into existence in 1946, save from 1954 to 1957 when the SPD formed a state government in coalition with the Bavaria Party and the state branches of the GB/BHE and FDP.

    Initially, the separatist Bavaria Party (BP) successfully competed for the same electorate as the CSU, as both parties saw and presented themselves as successors to the BVP. The CSU was ultimately able to win this power struggle for itself. Among other things, the BP was involved in the "casino affair" under dubious circumstances by the CSU at the end of the 1950s and lost considerable prestige and votes. In the 1966 state election, the BP finally left the state parliament.

    Before the 2008 elections in Bavaria, the CSU perennially achieved absolute majorities at the state level by itself. This level of dominance is unique among Germany's 16 states. Edmund Stoiber took over the CSU leadership in 1999. He ran for Chancellor of Germany in 2002, but his preferred CDU/CSU–FDP coalition lost against the SPD candidate Gerhard Schröder's SPD–Green alliance.

    In the 2003 Bavarian state election, the CSU won 60.7% of the vote and 124 of 180 seats in the state parliament. This was the first time any party had won a two-thirds majority in a German state parliament.[16] The Economist later suggested that this exceptional result was due to a backlash against Schröder's government in Berlin.[17] The CSU's popularity declined in subsequent years. Stoiber stepped down from the posts of Minister-President and CSU chairman in September 2007. A year later, the CSU lost its majority in the 2008 Bavarian state election, with its vote share dropping from 60.7% to 43.4%. The CSU remained in power by forming a coalition with the FDP. In the 2009 general election, the CSU received only 42.5% of the vote in Bavaria in the 2009 election, which by then constituted its weakest showing in the party's history.

    The CSU made gains in the 2013 Bavarian state election and the 2013 federal election, which were held a week apart in September 2013. The CSU regained their majority in the Bavarian Landtag and remained in government in Berlin. They had three ministers in the Fourth Merkel cabinet, namely Horst Seehofer (Minister of the Interior, Building and Community), Andreas Scheuer (Minister of Transport and Digital Infrastructure) and Gerd Müller (Minister for Economic Cooperation and Development).

    The 2018 Bavarian state election yielded the worst result for the CSU in the state elections (top candidate Markus Söder) since 1950 with 37.2% of votes, a decline of over ten percentage points compared to the last result in 2013. After that, the CSU had to form a new coalition government with the minor partner Free Voters of Bavaria.

    The 2021 German federal election saw the worst election result ever for the Union.[18] The CSU also had a weak showing with 5.2% of votes nationally and 31.7% of the total in Bavaria.

    Relationship with the CDU

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    The CSU is the sister party of the Christian Democratic Union (CDU).[19] Together, they are called the Union.[19] The CSU operates only within Bavaria, and the CDU operates in all states other than Bavaria. While virtually independent,[20] at the federal level the parties form a common CDU/CSU faction. No Chancellor has ever come from the CSU, although Strauß and Edmund Stoiber were CDU/CSU candidates for Chancellor in the 1980 federal election and the 2002 federal election, respectively, which were both won by the Social Democratic Party of Germany (SPD). Below the federal level, the parties are entirely independent.[21]

    Since its formation, the CSU has been more conservative than the CDU.[8][example needed] CSU and the state of Bavaria decided not to sign the Grundgesetz of the Federal Republic of Germany as they could not agree with the division of Germany into two states after World War II. Although Bavaria like all German states has a separate police and justice system (distinctive and non-federal), the CSU has actively participated in all political affairs of the German Parliament, the German government, the German Bundesrat, the parliamentary elections of the German President, the European Parliament and meetings with Mikhail Gorbachev in Russia.

    Like the CDU, the CSU is pro-European, although some Eurosceptic tendencies were shown in the past.[22]

    Leaders

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    Party chairmen

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    Chairman From To
    1st Josef Müller 17 December 1945 28 May 1949
    2nd Hans Ehard 28 May 1949 22 January 1955
    3rd Hanns Seidel 22 January 1955 16 February 1961
    4th Franz Josef Strauß 18 March 1961 3 October 1988
    5th Theodor Waigel 16 November 1988 16 January 1999
    6th Edmund Stoiber 16 January 1999 29 September 2007
    7th Erwin Huber 29 September 2007 25 October 2008
    8th Horst Seehofer 25 October 2008 19 January 2019
    9th Markus Söder 19 January 2019 Present day

    Ministers-president

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    The CSU has contributed eleven of the twelve Ministers-President of Bavaria since 1945, with only Wilhelm Hoegner (1945–1946, 1954–1957) of the SPD also holding the office.

    Minister-President From To
    Fritz Schäffer 28 May 1945 28 September 1945
    Hans Ehard (first time) 21 December 1946 14 December 1954
    Hanns Seidel 16 October 1957 22 January 1960
    Hans Ehard (second time) 26 January 1960 11 December 1962
    Alfons Goppel 11 December 1962 6 November 1978
    Franz Josef Strauss 6 November 1978 3 October 1988
    Max Streibl 19 October 1988 27 May 1993
    Edmund Stoiber 28 May 1993 30 September 2007
    Günther Beckstein 9 October 2007 27 October 2008
    Horst Seehofer 27 October 2008 13 March 2018
    Markus Söder 16 March 2018 Present day

    Election results

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    Federal parliament (Bundestag)

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    Election Constituency Party list Seats +/– Status
    Votes % Votes %
    1949 1,380,448 5.8 (#4)
    24 / 402

    CDU/CSU–FDPDP
    1953 2,450,286 8.9 (#4) 2,427,387 8.8 (#4)
    52 / 509

     28 CDU/CSU–FDPDP
    1957 3,186,150 10.6 (#3) 3,133,060 10.5 (#3)
    55 / 519

     3 CDU/CSU–DP
    1961 3,104,742 9.7 (#4) 3,014,471 9.6 (#4)
    50 / 521

     5 CDU/CSU–FDP
    1965 3,204,648 9.9 (#3) 3,136,506 9.6 (#3)
    49 / 518

     1 CDU/CSU–SPD
    1969 3,094,176 9.5 (#3) 3,115,652 9.5 (#3)
    49 / 518

      0 Opposition
    1972 3,620,625 9.7 (#3) 3,615,183 9.7 (#3)
    48 / 518

     1 Opposition
    1976 4,008,514 10.6 (#3) 4,027,499 10.6 (#3)
    53 / 518

     5 Opposition
    1980 3,941,365 10.4 (#3) 3,908,459 10.3 (#4)
    52 / 519

     1 Opposition (1980–82)
    CDU/CSU–FDP (1982–83)
    1983 4,318,800 11.1 (#3) 4,140,865 10.6 (#3)
    53 / 520

     1 CDU/CSU–FDP
    1987 3,859,244 10.2 (#3) 3,715,827 9.8 (#3)
    49 / 519

     4 CDU/CSU–FDP
    1990 3,423,904 7.4 (#4) 3,302,980 7.1 (#4)
    51 / 662

     2 CDU/CSU–FDP
    1994 3,657,627 6.5 (#3) 3,427,196 7.3 (#3)
    50 / 672

     1 CDU/CSU–FDP
    1998 3,602,472 7.3 (#3) 3,324,480 6.8 (#3)
    47 / 669

     3 Opposition
    2002 4,311,178 9.0 (#3) 4,315,080 9.0 (#3)
    58 / 603

     11 Opposition
    2005 3,889,990 8.2 (#3) 3,494,309 7.4 (#6)
    46 / 614

     12 CDU/CSU–SPD
    2009 3,191,000 7.4 (#6) 2,830,238 6.5 (#6)
    45 / 622

     1 CDU/CSU–FDP
    2013 3,544,079 8.1 (#4) 3,243,569 7.4 (#5)
    56 / 631

     11 CDU/CSU–SPD
    2017 3,255,604 7.0 (#6) 2,869,744 6.2 (#7)
    46 / 709

     10 CDU/CSU–SPD
    2021 2,787,904 6.0 (#6) 2,402,826 5.2 (#6)
    45 / 735

     1 Opposition

    European Parliament

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    Election Votes % Seats +/–
    1979 2,817,120 10.1 (#3)
    8 / 81

    1984 2,109,130 8.5 (#3)
    7 / 81

     1
    1989 2,326,277 8.2 (#4)
    7 / 81

      0
    1994 2,393,374 6.8 (#4)
    8 / 99

     1
    1999 2,540,007 9.4 (#4)
    10 / 99

     2
    2004 2,063,900 8.0 (#4)
    9 / 99

     1
    2009 1,896,762 7.2 (#6)
    8 / 99

     1
    2014 1,567,258 5.3 (#6)
    5 / 96

     3
    2019 2,354,816 6.3 (#5)
    6 / 96

     1
    2024 2,513,300 6.3 (#5)
    6 / 96

      0

    Landtag of Bavaria

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    Election Constituency Party list Seats +/– Status
    Votes % Votes %
    1946 1,593,908 52.2 (#1)
    104 / 180

    CSU–SPD
    1950 1,264,993 26.8 (#1) 1,262,377 27.4 (#1)
    64 / 204

     40 CSU–SPD
    1954 1,855,995 37.6 (#1) 1,835,959 37.9 (#1)
    83 / 204

     19 Opposition
    1958 2,101,645 44.8 (#1) 2,091,259 45.5 (#1)
    101 / 204

     18 CSU–FDP–BHE
    1962 2,343,169 47.1 (#1) 2,320,359 47.5 (#1)
    108 / 204

     7 CSU–BP
    1966 2,549,610 47.7 (#1) 2,524,732 48.1 (#1)
    110 / 204

     2 CSU majority
    1970 3,205,170 56.2 (#1) 3,139,429 56.4 (#1)
    124 / 204

     14 CSU majority
    1974 3,520,065 61.7 (#1) 3,481,486 62.0 (#1)
    132 / 204

     8 CSU majority
    1978 3,394,096 58.5 (#1) 3,387,995 59.1 (#1)
    129 / 204

     3 CSU majority
    1982 3,557,068 57.9 (#1) 3,534,375 58.2 (#1)
    133 / 204

     4 CSU majority
    1986 3,142,094 54.9 (#1) 3,191,640 55.7 (#1)
    128 / 204

     5 CSU majority
    1990 3,007,566 52.6 (#1) 3,085,948 54.9 (#1)
    127 / 204

     1 CSU majority
    1994 3,063,635 52.2 (#1) 3,100,253 52.8 (#1)
    120 / 204

     7 CSU majority
    1998 3,168,996 51.7 (#1) 3,278,768 52.9 (#1)
    123 / 204

     3 CSU majority
    2003 3,050,456 59.3 (#1) 3,167,408 60.6 (#1)
    124 / 180

     1 CSU majority
    2008 2,267,521 42.5 (#1) 2,336,439 43.4 (#1)
    92 / 187

     32 CSU–FDP
    2013 2,754,256 46.5 (#1) 2,882,169 47.7 (#1)
    101 / 180

     9 CSU majority
    2018 2,495,186 36.7 (#1) 2,551,046 37.2 (#1)
    85 / 205

     16 CSU–FW
    2023 2,527,580 37.0 (#1) 2,531,562 37.1 (#1)
    85 / 203

      CSU-FW

    See also

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    Notes and references

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    1. ^ "Bavaria's parties lose members". Süddeutsche Zeitung (in German). 8 February 2023. Archived from the original on 29 July 2023. Retrieved 7 October 2023.
  • ^ Boswell, Christina; Hough, Dan (2009). "Politicizing migration : opportunity or liability for the centre-right in Germany?". Immigration and integration policy in Europe : why politics -- and the centre-right -- matter. By Bale, Tim. Journal of European Public Policy Series. London: Routledge. pp. 18, 21. ISBN 9780415468343. OCLC 461254258.
  • ^ Klaus Detterbeck (2012). Multi-Level Party Politics in Western Europe. Palgrave Macmillan. p. 105.
  • ^ Hornsteiner, Margaret; Saalfeld, Thomas (2014). "Parties and the Party System". Developments in German Politics. By Padgett, Stephen; Paterson, William E.; Zohlnhöfer, Reimut. Vol. 4. Basingstoke, Hampshire: Palgrave Macmillan. p. 80. ISBN 9781137301635. OCLC 885477730.
  • ^ [2][3][4]
  • ^ Hans Slomp (2011). Europe, a Political Profile: An American Companion to European Politics. ABC-CLIO. p. 364. ISBN 978-0-313-39181-1.
  • ^ a b Nordsieck, Wolfram (2017). "Germany". Parties and Elections in Europe. Archived from the original on 22 October 2018. Retrieved 22 October 2013.
  • ^ a b Budge, Ian; Robertson, David; Hearl, Derek (1987). Ideology, Strategy, and Party Change: Spatial Analyses of Post-war Election Programmes in 19 Democracies. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. p. 296. ISBN 9780521306485.
  • ^ Paul Statham; Hans-Jörg Trenz (2012). The Politicization of Europe: Contesting the Constitution in the Mass Media. Routledge. p. 120. ISBN 978-0-415-58466-1.
  • ^ Antje Ellermann (2009). States Against Migrants: Deportation in Germany and the United States. Cambridge University Press. p. 58. ISBN 978-0-521-51568-9.
  • ^ Eve Hepburn (2016). "Cohesion Policy and Regional Mobilisation". In Simona Piattoni; Laura Polverari (eds.). Handbook on Cohesion Policy in the EU. Edward Elgar Publishing. p. 210. ISBN 978-1-78471-567-0.
  • ^ Ford, Graham (August 2007). "Constructing a Regional Identity: The Christian Social Union and Bavaria's Common Heritage, 1949–1962" (PDF). Contemporary European History. 16 (3). Cambridge University Press: 277–297. doi:10.1017/S0960777307003943. JSTOR 20081363. S2CID 146439508. Archived (PDF) from the original on 10 October 2022.
  • ^ "Streit in der CSU über Sozialpolitik entbrannt". Süddeutsche Zeitung. 19 May 2010. Archived from the original on 30 October 2019. Retrieved 30 October 2019.
  • ^ Biesinger, Joseph A. (2006). Germany: A Reference Guide from the Renaissance to the Present. Infobase Publishing. p. 310. ISBN 9780816074716.
  • ^ "Results – The Federal Returning Officer". bundeswahlleiter.de (in German). The Federal Returning Officer. Archived from the original on 3 March 2022. Retrieved 28 February 2022.
  • ^ Clayton Clemens. "Stoiber – Dominant But Not Omnipotent". Archived 3 October 2008 at the Wayback Machine American Institute for Contemporary German Studies. Retrieved 7 June 2008.
  • ^ "The Economist: Old soldiers march into the unknown" Archived 5 April 2023 at the Wayback Machine.
  • ^ "Germany election: worst ever result momentarily silences CDU". the Guardian. 26 September 2021. Archived from the original on 4 April 2023. Retrieved 21 November 2021.
  • ^ a b "A Quick Guide to Germany's Political Parties". Der Spiegel. 25 September 2009. Archived from the original on 16 May 2023. Retrieved 1 December 2012.
  • ^ The Economist (1983). Political Europe. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. p. 16. ISBN 978-0-521-27793-8.
  • ^ Solsten, Eric (1999). Germany: A Country Study. Quezon: DANE Publishing. p. 375. ISBN 978-0-521-27793-8.
  • ^ Vitzthum, Thomas (21 December 2018). "Plötzlich entdeckt die CSU ihre Zuneigung zur EU wieder". Die Welt. Archived from the original on 6 April 2023. Retrieved 21 December 2018.
  • Further reading

    edit
    edit

    Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Christian_Social_Union_in_Bavaria&oldid=1232883735"
     



    Last edited on 6 July 2024, at 03:42  





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    This page was last edited on 6 July 2024, at 03:42 (UTC).

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