- Joined
- Nov 14, 2022
- Highlight
- #1
On election day, German voters cast two votes: one for a candidate in their district (like a U.S. House race) and one for a political party. The Bundestag (federal parliament) is then filled proportionally based on party votes, with 630 seats.
A party needs at least 5% of the vote (5% threshold) or 3 directly elected district seats to enter parliament. Since no party usually wins a majority, coalition negotiations follow, often taking weeks or months. Once parties agree on a coalition, they propose a chancellor candidate, who must be elected by the Bundestag. If successful, the president formally appoints the chancellor, who then takes office.
As for election day itself, the voting booths are open from 8 AM to 6 PM local time.
Exit polling and live coverage exist, but generally less dramatic than in the US. Although, with how absolutely heated this one is, it might come closer.
At 6 PM local time, the polls close and the first exit polls are immediately released on TV (public broadcasting, ARD/ZDF). These are usually quite accurate and the first moment to start laughing.
Around 6:15 to 8 PM, the first projections come in as the real vote count starts being integrated, and they get more precise as the night progresses.
Between 10 PM and midnight, a fairly stable official preliminary result is available, based on near-complete counting.
If you're watching for schadenfreude, 6 PM is the moment to tune in.
The current chancellor candidates are
Pretty much all the polls before election day look like this:

^ Check this post if you want to see what the party frontrunners had to say on Xitter today
^ Thread theme if you are against the status quo
(my attempt to translate the lyrics, post <-)
^ Thread theme if you are in favor of the status quo
A party needs at least 5% of the vote (5% threshold) or 3 directly elected district seats to enter parliament. Since no party usually wins a majority, coalition negotiations follow, often taking weeks or months. Once parties agree on a coalition, they propose a chancellor candidate, who must be elected by the Bundestag. If successful, the president formally appoints the chancellor, who then takes office.
As for election day itself, the voting booths are open from 8 AM to 6 PM local time.
Exit polling and live coverage exist, but generally less dramatic than in the US. Although, with how absolutely heated this one is, it might come closer.
At 6 PM local time, the polls close and the first exit polls are immediately released on TV (public broadcasting, ARD/ZDF). These are usually quite accurate and the first moment to start laughing.
Around 6:15 to 8 PM, the first projections come in as the real vote count starts being integrated, and they get more precise as the night progresses.
Between 10 PM and midnight, a fairly stable official preliminary result is available, based on near-complete counting.
If you're watching for schadenfreude, 6 PM is the moment to tune in.
The current chancellor candidates are
- Olaf Scholz (Social Democratic Party of Germany (SPD)), current Federal Chancellor
- Robert Habeck (Green Party), current Vice Chancellor and Minister of the Economy
- Friedrich Merz (Christian Democratic Union (CDU)), CDU chairman
- Alice Weidel (Alternative for Germany (AfD)), AfD chairwoman
- Sahra Wagenknecht (Sahra Wagenknecht Alliance (BSW)), BSW chairwoman
Pretty much all the polls before election day look like this:

^ Check this post if you want to see what the party frontrunners had to say on Xitter today
^ Thread theme if you are against the status quo
(my attempt to translate the lyrics, post <-)
^ Thread theme if you are in favor of the status quo
Newsticker
(military time; German local time; newest to oldest)February 24
(as you're reading the projections, keep in mind 316+ seats == absolute majority)- 10:01: Wolfgang Kubicki (FDP) is considering running for party chairman due to overwhelming support, post <-
- 08:16: The very first thing CDU xeets is a call for Ukraine to win the war and Germany supporting it, post <-
- 02:00: First official result.
16.41% SPD / 28.52% CDU / 11.61% Green / 4.33% FDP / 20.80% AfD / 8.77% Left / 4.97% BSW / 4.58% Others
120 SPD / 208 CDU/CSU / 85 Green / 152 AfD / 64 Left / 1 SSW - 01:48: Looks like the count is done in all districts, and BSW is out of the picture with 4.972%
- 00:34: New projection
16.5% SPD / 28.5% CDU / 11.6% Green / 4.3% FDP / 20.8% AfD / 8.8% Left / 5.0% BSW / 4.5% Others
February 23 - Election Day
(as you're reading the projections, keep in mind 316+ seats == absolute majority)- 23:40: New projection
16.5% SPD / 28.5% CDU / 11.7% Green / 4.4% FDP / 20.5% AfD / 8.7% Left / 5.0% BSW / 4.7% Others - 23:10: New projection
16.5% SPD / 28.5% CDU / 11.8% Green / 4.5% FDP / 20.5% AfD / 8.7% Left / 5.0% BSW / 4.5% Others - 22:28: With the 5% threshold being out of the question, FDP chairman Christian Lindner has said buh-bye to politics. Wolfgang Kubicki also makes his exit.
- 21:46: New projection
16.5% SPD / 28.5% CDU / 11.9% Green / 4.5% FDP / 20.5% AfD / 8.7% Left / 5.0% BSW / 4.4% Others
114 SPD / 197 CDU/CSU / 82 Green / 141 AfD / 60 Left / 35 BSW / 1 SSW
120 SPD / 208 CDU/CSU / 87 Green / 150 AfD / 64 Left / 1 SSW <- hypothetical if BSW doesn't make it - 20:58: New projection
16.5% SPD / 28.6% CDU / 12.1% Green / 4.7% FDP / 20.5% AfD / 8.7% Left / 5.0% BSW / 3.9% Others
114 SPD / 197 CDU/CSU / 83 Green / 141 AfD / 60 Left / 34 BSW / 1 SSW
120 SPD / 209 CDU/CSU / 88 Green / 149 AfD / 63 Left / 1 SSW <- hypothetical if BSW doesn't make it - 20:12: New projection
16.4% SPD / 28.4% CDU / 12.2% Green / 4.8% FDP / 20.4% AfD / 8.9% Left / 5.0% BSW / 3.9% Others
113 SPD / 196 CDU/CSU / 84 Green / 141 AfD / 61 Left / 34 BSW / 1 SSW
119 SPD / 207 CDU/CSU / 89 Green / 149 AfD / 65 Left / 1 SSW <- hypothetical if BSW don't make it - 19:30: New projection
16.3% SPD / 28.5% CDU / 12.4% Green / 4.9% FDP / 20.1% AfD / 8.7% Left / 5.0% BSW / 4.1% Others
112 SPD / 197 CDU/CSU / 86 Green / 139 AfD / 60 Left / 35 BSW / 1 SSW - 19:00: New projection
16.3% SPD / 28.4% CDU / 12.4% Green / 5.0% FDP / 20.1% AfD / 8.8% Left / 5.0% BSW / 4.0% Others - 18:53: Highest voter turnout since German Reunification; 83-84%, of more than 59 million people who are eligible to vote. 76.4% in 2021 after a partial re-vote in Berlin.
- 18:51: New projection
16.3% SPD / 28.6% CDU / 12.4% Green / 5.0% FDP / 20.1% AfD / 8.9% Left / 5.0% BSW / 3.7% Others
106 SPD / 187 CDU/CSU / 81 Green / 33 FDP / 131 AfD / 58 Left / 33 BSW / 1 SSW - 18:22: First projection
16.4% SPD / 28.7% CDU / 12.3% Green / 5.0% FDP / 19.8% AfD / 8.9% Left / 5.0% BSW / 3.9% Others
107 SPD / 188 CDU/CSU / 81 Green / 33 FDP / 130 AfD / 58 Left / 33 BSW - 18:15: CSU frontrunner Alexander Dobrindt again emphasizes that there will be no CDU-Green coalition.
CDU/CSU + SPD + FDP -> 328 seats
CDU/CSU + SPD + Green -> 374 seats
CDU/CSU + AfD -> 318 seats - 18:00: Voting's over.
16.5% SPD / 28.5% CDU / 12.0% Green / 5.0% FDP / 20.0% AfD / 9.0% Left / 5.0% BSW / 4.0% Others <- first exit poll
108 SPD / 187 CDU/CSU / 79 Green / 33 FDP / 131 AfD / 59 Left / 33 BSW <- corresponding seats in parliament - Afternoon: Apollo News reports that Antifa organizations have already announced that they will disturb at the CDU headquarters in Berlin, translated article post <-
- 16:17: @Smyrna claims that the in-person turnout by 14:00 "was 52% - the highest since 1998".
- 15:43: On Xitter I am seeing lots of posts of people claiming to be election helpers and throwing ballots with AfD votes in the trash. It's honestly not clear to me to what extent it's fake, bait, trolling, or sincere virtue signalling.
- 08:00: Voting is now open, until 18:00.
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