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2004 Hamburg state election

State election in Hamburg, Germany


State election in Hamburg, Germany

FieldValue
election_name2004 Hamburg state election
countryHamburg
typeparliamentary
ongoingno
previous_election2001 Hamburg state election
previous_year2001
next_election2008 Hamburg state election
next_year2008
seats_for_electionAll 121 seats in the Hamburg Parliament
majority_seats61
election_date29 February 2004
turnout824,317 (68.7%)
2.4%
image1[[File:Ole von Beust 3289c.JPG125px]]
leader1Ole von Beust
party1Christian Democratic Union of Germany
last_election133 seats, 26.2%
seats163
popular_vote1389,170
seat_change130
percentage147.2%
swing121.0%
leader2Thomas Mirow
party2Social Democratic Party of Germany
last_election246 seats, 36.5%
seats241
popular_vote2251,441
seat_change25
percentage230.5%
swing26.0%
party3Alliance 90/The Greens
last_election311 seats, 8.6%
seats317
popular_vote3101,227
seat_change36
percentage312.3%
swing33.7%
party4Free Democratic Party (Germany)
last_election46 seats, 5.1%
seats40
popular_vote423,373
seat_change46
percentage42.8%
swing42.3%
leader5Mario Mettbach
color563B8FF
party5PRO
last_election525 seats, 19.4%
seats50
popular_vote53,046
seat_change525
percentage50.4%
swing519.0%
titleMayor
before_electionOle von Beust
before_partyChristian Democratic Union of Germany
after_electionOle von Beust
after_partyChristian Democratic Union of Germany

2.4%

The 2004 Hamburg state election was held on 29 February 2004 to elect the members of the 18th Hamburg Parliament. The election was triggered by the collapse of the coalition government between the Christian Democratic Union (CDU), Party for a Rule of Law Offensive (PRO), and Free Democratic Party (FDP). The election saw a collapse in support for PRO which had split after its leader Ronald Schill left in 2003. The original party and Schill's new party captured 3.5% of the vote between them, down from 19.4% in 2001. A huge amount of support flowed to the CDU, which won 63 of the 121 seats in Parliament, forming a majority government. First Mayor Ole von Beust continued in office.

Parties

The table below lists parties represented in the 17th Hamburg Parliament.

NameIdeologyLeader(s)2001 resultVotes (%)Seats
Social Democratic Party of Germany}}SPDSocial Democratic Party of Germany
Sozialdemokratische Partei DeutschlandsSocial democracyThomas Mirow36.5%
Christian Democratic Union of Germany}}CDUChristian Democratic Union of Germany
Christlich Demokratische Union DeutschlandsChristian democracyOle von Beust26.2%
Party for a Rule of Law Offensive}}PROParty for a Rule of Law Offensive
Partei Rechtsstaatlicher OffensiveRight-wing populismMario Mettbach19.4%
Alliance 90/The Greens}}GALGreen Alternative List
Grün-Alternative-Liste HamburgGreen politics8.6%
Free Democratic Party (Germany)}}FDPFree Democratic Party
Freie Demokratische ParteiClassical liberalism5.1%

Background

In August 2003, Mayor von Beust made moves to dismiss an Interior official suspected of corruption. In response, Senator of the Interior Ronald Schill threatened to spread rumours of an affair between von Beust and the Senator of Justice. Schill was subsequently dismissed from the government. In December of the same year, Schill left his own party along with five of its members of Parliament, depriving the government of its majority. He subsequently joined Pro DM.

Opinion polling

Polling firmFieldwork dateSample
sizeSPDCDUPROGALFDPProDMOthersLeadSocial Democratic Party of Germany}};"Christian Democratic Union of Germany}};"Party for a Rule of Law Offensive}};"Alliance 90/The Greens}};"Free Democratic Party (Germany)}};"
2004 state election29 Feb 200430.547.20.412.32.83.13.7Christian Democratic Union of Germany}};color:#FFFFFF;"16.7
Emnid20–26 Feb 20041,0093044114443Christian Democratic Union of Germany}};color:#FFFFFF;"14
Emnid24 Feb 20041,0003046113334Christian Democratic Union of Germany}};color:#FFFFFF;"16
Forsa18–23 Feb 20041,0052945114434Christian Democratic Union of Germany}};color:#FFFFFF;"16
Psephos19–22 Feb 20041,00330461123.53.54Christian Democratic Union of Germany}};color:#FFFFFF;"16
Forschungsgruppe Wahlen16–19 Feb 20041,008294713434Christian Democratic Union of Germany}};color:#FFFFFF;"18
Infratest dimap12–16 Feb 20041,0002945114443Christian Democratic Union of Germany}};color:#FFFFFF;"16
Forsa10–14 Feb 20041,0023045114433Christian Democratic Union of Germany}};color:#FFFFFF;"15
Forsa6–9 Feb 20048042946114433Christian Democratic Union of Germany}};color:#FFFFFF;"17
Infratest dimap28 Jan–1 Feb 20041,0003045115333Christian Democratic Union of Germany}};color:#FFFFFF;"15
Forsa20–24 Jan 20041,0012848113433Christian Democratic Union of Germany}};color:#FFFFFF;"20
Emnid19 Jan 20041,0003146212423Christian Democratic Union of Germany}};color:#FFFFFF;"15
Infratest dimap8–12 Jan 20041,0003045113443Christian Democratic Union of Germany}};color:#FFFFFF;"15
Psephos9 Jan 20041,0023047211244Christian Democratic Union of Germany}};color:#FFFFFF;"17
Forsa17 Dec 2003?314631343Christian Democratic Union of Germany}};color:#FFFFFF;"15
Infratest10–11 Dec 20031,000334341244Christian Democratic Union of Germany}};color:#FFFFFF;"10
Emnid10 Dec 20031,000374321242Christian Democratic Union of Germany}};color:#FFFFFF;"6
Psephos9–10 Dec 2003808364151134Christian Democratic Union of Germany}};color:#FFFFFF;"5
Infratest dimap8–9 Dec 20031,000354051343Christian Democratic Union of Germany}};color:#FFFFFF;"5
Emnid2–3 Dec 20031,000354151333Christian Democratic Union of Germany}};color:#FFFFFF;"6
Psephos10 Oct 2003?373961044Christian Democratic Union of Germany}};color:#FFFFFF;"2
Infratest dimap5–9 Sep 20031,000363951343Christian Democratic Union of Germany}};color:#FFFFFF;"3
Psephos23 Aug 2003731364061053Christian Democratic Union of Germany}};color:#FFFFFF;"4
NFO Infratest20–21 Aug 2003~1,000374051143Christian Democratic Union of Germany}};color:#FFFFFF;"3
Emnid20 Aug 20031,002353861353Christian Democratic Union of Germany}};color:#FFFFFF;"3
Emnid4–5 Feb 20031,0002642121352Christian Democratic Union of Germany}};color:#FFFFFF;"16
Psephos25 Oct 20021,003363481354Social Democratic Party of Germany}};color:#FFFFFF;"2
Emnid7 Feb 2002?373212964Social Democratic Party of Germany}};color:#FFFFFF;"5
Emnid2–4 Feb 20021,0084032101143Social Democratic Party of Germany}};color:#FFFFFF;"8
Psephos2 Feb 20021,003363214954Social Democratic Party of Germany}};color:#FFFFFF;"4
Forsa22–23 Jan 20021,0013531151045Social Democratic Party of Germany}};color:#FFFFFF;"4
2001 state election23 Sep 200136.526.219.48.65.10.24.0Social Democratic Party of Germany}};color:#FFFFFF;"10.3

Election result

|- ! colspan="2" | Party ! Votes ! % ! +/- ! Seats ! +/- ! Seats %

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References

References

  1. "Mayor von Beust to govern alone after victory in Hamburg election". Deutsche Welle.
  2. (2003-08-21). "A scandal in Germany". bbc.co.uk.
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