Social-liberal coalition
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Content in this edit is translated from the existing German Wikipedia article at [[:de:Sozialliberale Koalition]]; see its history for attribution.
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Social–liberal coalition (German: Sozialliberale Koalition) in the politics of Germany refers to a governmental coalition formed by the Social Democratic Party of Germany (SPD) and the Free Democratic Party (FDP). From 1969 to 1982 social–liberal coalitions led by Federal Chancellors Willy Brandt and Helmut Schmidt governed the Federal Republic of Germany.[1]
The term stems from social democracy of the SPD and the liberalism of the FDP. Because of the colours traditionally used to symbolise the two parties (red for SPD and yellow for FDP), such a coalition is also referred to as a "red–yellow" coalition (rot–gelbe Koalition). The FDP is basically an economic/classical liberal party, but under the coalition, the FDP and the SPD are close to left-liberalism (Linksliberalismus).
Social–liberal coalitions are currently rare, as the SPD usually governs with the Alliance '90/The Greens and the FDP orients itself towards long-term co-operation with the Christian Democratic Union and Bavarian Christian Social Union. However, a social–liberal coalition ruled from 1991 to 2006 in the German State of Rhineland-Palatinate and would have continued to do so, had the SPD not won an absolute majority. Social–liberal coalitions have previously been in power in many other federal states of Germany as well.
The traffic light coalition is a combination of the social-liberal coalition and the red-green coalition insofar as it includes the Social Democratic Party, the FDP and the greens, which are the constituent elements of the other two coalitions. The Weimar Coalition was a similar constellation of parties as it included the Social Democratic Party as well as a left-liberal party (the then German Democratic Party one of the predecessors of the FDP) and the liberal-conservative/conservative-liberal element also present in the FDP with the Zentrumspartei. However, the political Catholicism espoused by the Zentrum is absent in the postwar social-liberal coalition.
Social–liberal coalitions at the federal state level
After the term, the leader of the government is given.
Berlin
- 1963–66 Willy Brandt (despite having an absolute majority)
- 1966–67 Heinrich Albertz (despite having an absolute majority)
- 1967–71 Klaus Schütz (despite having an absolute majority)
- 1975–77 Klaus Schütz
- 1977–81 Dietrich Stobbe
- 1981 Hans-Jochen Vogel
Bremen
- 1959–65 Wilhelm Kaisen
- 1967–71 Hans Koschnick
Hamburg
- 1957–61 Max Brauer
- 1961–65 Paul Nevermann
- 1965–66 Herbert Weichmann
- 1970–71 Herbert Weichmann
- 1971–74 Peter Schulz
- 1974–78 Hans-Ulrich Klose
- 1987–88 Klaus von Dohnanyi
- 1988–91 Henning Voscherau
Hesse
- 1970–76 Albert Osswald
- 1976–82 Holger Börner
Lower Saxony
- 1963–65 Georg Diederichs
- 1974–76 Alfred Kubel
North Rhine-Westphalia
- 1956–58 Fritz Steinhoff
- 1966–78 Heinz Kühn
- 1978–80 Johannes Rau
Rhineland-Palatinate
- 1991–94 Rudolf Scharping
- 1994–2006 Kurt Beck
See also
- German governing coalition
- Grand coalition (Germany)
- Traffic light coalition
- Jamaica coalition
- Red–green alliance
- Lib–Lab pact for the equivalent in British politics
- Purple coalition
References
- ^ ""Dare more democracy" – Domestic and social policy 1969–1974". Willy Brandt Biografie. Retrieved 2023-05-25.
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Weimar Republic (1918–1933) | |
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Federal Republic (1949–present) |
Weimar Republic (1918–1933) |
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Federal Republic (1949–present) |
(since 1946)
- Kurt Schumacher
- Erich Ollenhauer
- Willy Brandt
- Hans-Jochen Vogel
- Björn Engholm
- Rudolf Scharping
- Oskar Lafontaine
- Gerhard Schröder
- Franz Müntefering
- Matthias Platzeck
- Kurt Beck
- Franz Müntefering
- Sigmar Gabriel
- Martin Schulz
- Andrea Nahles
- Saskia Esken & Norbert Walter-Borjans
- Saskia Esken & Lars Klingbeil
Bundestag
(since 1999)
- Grand coalition
- Social-liberal coalition
- Red–green coalition
- Red–red–green coalition
- Kenya coalition