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Green Party faction (Bundestag)

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Part of the Politics series on Green politics

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The German Green Party (Bündnis 90/Die Grünen) has been present in the German parliament (Bundestag) continuously since March 29 1983 as a parliamentarian party.

Contents

The faction in the 10th Bundestag, 1983 - 1987

Scoring 5.6% in the federal parliamental elections in 1983, the Greens enter the Bundestag for the first time with a total of 28 seats. Faction members are rotated after two years in 1985 (with the exception of Petra Kelly and Gert Bastian), but the concept is abolished in May 1986 again. The executive board, elected by faction members on April 3 1984, consists of Annemarie Borgmann, Waltraud Schoppe, Antje Vollmer, Christa Nickels, Heidemarie Dann and Erika Hickel. The members of the faction were:

The faction in the 11th Bundestag, 1987 - 1990

In the 1987 parliamental elections, the Green Party manages to increase its share of votes to 8.3%, gaining 44 parliamental seats in the process. When the East German parliament, the Volkskammer, which was freely elected on March 18 1990 for the first time, is disbanded in the process of the German reunification, another 7 seats are added as 7 members of the 21-member Volkskammer faction of the Green Party, elected by their peers, enter the Bundestag. The members of the faction are:

  • Marieluise Beck-Oberdorf
  • Angelika Beer
  • Helga Brahmst-Rock
  • Hans-Joachim Brauer
  • Ulrich Briefs (left the faction in 1990)
  • Wolfgang Daniels
  • Thomas Ebermann (1987 - 1989)
  • Tay Eich (1989 - 1990)
  • Uschi Eid
  • Dora Flinner
  • Sieglinde Friess (1989 - 1990)
  • Charlotte Garbe
  • Gerald Häfner
  • Karitas Hensel
  • Imma Hillerich
  • Willi Hoss
  • Uwe Hüser
  • Petra Kelly
  • Hubert Kleinert
  • Wilhelm Knabe
  • Almut Kottwitz (1989 - 1990)
  • Matthias Kreuzeder
  • Verena Krieger (1987 - 1989)
  • Helmut Lippelt
  • Alfred Mechtersheimer
  • German Meneses-Vogl (1989 - 1990)
  • Christa Nickels
  • Jutta Oesterle-Schwerin
  • Ellen Olms (1987 - 1989)
  • Norbert Roske (1990)
  • Bärbel Rust
  • Hannelore Saibold
  • Gertrud Schilling
  • Otto Schily (left the faction in 1989 and became a member of the SPD faction)
  • Marieluise Schmidt (1989 - 1990)
  • Regula Schmidt-Bott (1987 - 1989)
  • Waltraud Schoppe
  • Peter Sellin (1987 - 1989)
  • Eckhard Stratmann
  • Manfred Such (1989 - 1990)
  • Maria Luise Teubner
  • Erika Trenz
  • Trude Unruh (left the faction in 1989)
  • Christa Vennegerts
  • Antje Vollmer
  • Ludger Volmer
  • Michael Weiß
  • Dietrich Wetzel
  • Heike Wilms-Kegel
  • Lieselotte Wollny
  • Thomas Wüppesahl (left the faction on January 26 1988)

The Green group in the 12th Bundestag, 1990 - 1994

In 1990, elections are held separately in former East and West Germany; in West Germany, the Green Party does not manage to gain enough votes to enter parliament, only scoring 4.8% instead of the necessary 5%, but in East Germany, the Greens gain a 6.1% share of the votes and 8 seats in the Bundestag. While a green presence in the 12th Bundestag is thus secured, the Greens cannot form a faction, instead remaining a "group" (with less rights and a smaller budget). The members of the faction are:

  • Klaus-Dieter Feige
  • Ingrid Köppe
  • Vera Lengsfeld
  • Gerd Poppe
  • Christina Schenk (left the faction in 1994)
  • Werner Schulz
  • Wolfgang Ullmann
  • Konrad Weiß

The faction in the 13th Bundestag, 1994 - 1998

4 years later, in 1994, the Greens manage to recover from their losses again, achieving 7.3% and entering the parliament with 48 seats. Antje Vollmer, long-time member of the faction, is elected as first Green Vice President of the Bundestag with the help of the CDU faction. The members of the faction include:

  • Elisabeth Altmann
  • Gila Altmann
  • Marieluise Beck
  • Volker Beck
  • Angelika Beer
  • Matthias Berninger
  • Annelie Buntenbach
  • Amke Dietert-Scheuer
  • Franziska Eichstädt-Bohlig
  • Uschi Eid
  • Andrea Fischer
  • Joschka Fischer
  • Rita Grießhaber
  • Gerald Häfner
  • Antje Hermenau
  • Kristin Heyne
  • Ulrike Höfken
  • Michaele Hustedt
  • Manuel Kiper
  • Monika Knoche
  • Angelika Köster-Loßack
  • Steffi Lemke
  • Vera Lengsfeld (left the faction in 1996 and became a member of the CDU faction)
  • Helmut Lippelt
  • Oswald Metzger
  • Kerstin Müller
  • Winfried Nachtwei
  • Christa Nickels
  • Egbert Nitsch (1994 - 1996)
  • Cem Özdemir
  • Gerd Poppe
  • Simone Probst
  • Jürgen Rochlitz
  • Hannelore Saibold
  • Christine Scheel
  • Irmingard Schewe-Gerigk
  • Rezzo Schlauch
  • Albert Schmidt
  • Wolfgang Schmitt
  • Ursula Schönberger
  • Waltraud Schoppe
  • Werner Schulz
  • Rainder Steenblock (1996 - 1998)
  • Marina Steindor
  • Christian Sterzing
  • Manfred Such
  • Antje Vollmer
  • Ludger Volmer
  • Helmut Wilhelm
  • Margareta Wolf

The faction in the 14th Bundestag, 1998 - 2002

In 1998, the Green Party suffers slight losses, dropping down to 6.7%, but still manages to gain 47 seats in a larger parliament. For the first time it is possible to form a red-green government coalition with the election-winning SPD. The members of the faction are:

The faction in the 15th Bundestag, 2002 - 2005

While the ruling SPD suffers substantial losses during the 2002 parliamental elections and only barely manages to become the biggest faction in the Bundestag, the Green Party gains 1.9 points compared to the 1998 elections, for a total of 8.6%, yielding 55 seats. The members of the faction are:

The faction in the 16th Bundestag, 2005 - Present

The ruling SPD/Green Party suffers losses during the 2005 parliamental elections leading to a Grand Coalition between the SPD and the CDU/CSU. The Green Party loses four seats to go from 55 to 51 and goes into opposition with the FDP and the Left Party. The members of the faction are:

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Green Party faction (Bundestag) from Wíkipedia. ©2006 by Wíkipedia. Licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. View a list of authors or edit this article.

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