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1971 East German general election

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FieldValue
countryEast Germany
typelegislative
turnout98.48% ( 0.34pp)
previous_election1967 East German general election
previous_year1967
election_date
next_election1976 East German general election
next_year1976
seats_for_election434 out of 500 seats in the Volkskammer
image1Bundesarchiv Bild 183-R0518-182, Erich Honecker.jpg
leader1Erich Honecker
party1Socialist Unity Party of Germany
alliance1National Front
seats1127
seat_change1
map_image[[File:1971 East German election.svg250px]]
map_captionResults of the election.
titleChairman of the Council of Ministers
before_electionWilli Stoph
before_partySocialist Unity Party of Germany
posttitleChairman of the Council of Ministers after election
after_electionWilli Stoph
after_partySocialist Unity Party of Germany

General elections were held in East Germany on 14 November 1971.

434 deputies were elected to the Volkskammer, with all of them being candidates of the single-list National Front. 584 Front candidates were put forward, with 434 being elected. The allocation of seats between member parties of the Front remained unchanged from previous elections.

Like all East German elections before the Peaceful Revolution, this election was neither free nor fair. Voters were only presented with a closed list of candidates (pre-approved by the SED Central Committee Secretariat) put forward by the National Front. The list predetermined an outcome whereby the SED had both the largest faction in the Volkskammer and a majority of its members, as almost all of the Volkskammer members elected for one of the mass organizations were also members of the SED (in this election, all but 4 out of the 165 mass organization Volkskammer members were SED members). While voters could reject the list, they would have to use the polling booth, the use of which was documented by Stasi informants located at every polling site, and had to cross out every name, as "Yes" and "No" boxes were removed after the 1950 election. Abstaining from voting was also seen as oppositional and punished. While legally permissible according to East German election laws, widespread election monitoring was not done out of fear for repression until the 1989 local elections.

Results

Berlin|seattype3=Total|seattype4=+/–

References

References

  1. "Wahlen in der DDR". [[Federal Foundation for the Reappraisal of the SED Dictatorship]].
  2. Bundesstiftung Aufarbeitung Brand. (2022-08-08). "MitBeStimmen: Wahlen in der DDR: So unterschiedlich sind Demokratie und Diktatur".
  3. MDR Investigativ. (2019-05-21). "Wahlfälschung bei der DDR-Kommunalwahl 1989 - Der Anfang vom Ende {{!}} FAKT".
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