FREE DEMOCRATIC PARTY (GERMANY)
The 'Free Democratic Party' (German: ''Freie Demokratische Partei''; 'FDP') is a liberal political party in Germany. The party's ideology combines beliefs in the market economy and individual rights with features of the German social welfare system. The FDP is currently the third-largest party in the Bundestag.
The FDP was formed on December 11, 1948, by local liberal parties. These were founded in 1945 by former members of the liberal German Democratic Party (DDP) and some from the center-right German People's Party (DVP). The FDP's first chairman, Theodor Heuss, was a former leader of the DDP. The FDP has traditionally been composed mainly of middle-class and upper-class Protestants who consider themselves to be independents and heirs to the European liberal tradition. The party is a relatively weak institutional party, gaining between 5.8 and 12.8% of the votes in federal elections. However, it has participated as a junior partner in all but six postwar federal governments in coalition with either the Christian Democrats (CDU) or the Social Democrats (SPD). Thus it has spent only about 15 years out of government since 1949. It has generally distinguished itself from the CDU and the SPD by advocating more market-oriented policies.
The party became involved in controversy when, during the 1994 federal elections, one of its members declared it to be the party of the ''Besserverdienenden'' ("better-earning people"), in reaction to the SPD's advocacy of a special tax for the ''Besserverdienenden''. Political adversaries have claimed that the FDP opposes the interests of poorer people.
Throughout its history, the party's economic policies have shifted between social liberalism (in the European sense) and market liberalism. Since the 1980s the FDP has maintained a consistently free-market stance, by German standards. Howerver, many of its policies acknowledge that certain aims can not be reached by market mechanisms alone and would not be seen as free-market policies in, for example, the USA; so the FDP supports a minimum standard of welfare protections for all and strong anti-trust policies, for example.
In foreign policy the FDP supports European integration and transatlantic partnership.
In all federal election campaigns since the 1980s, the party has sided with the CDU and CSU, the main center-right parties in Germany. An exception to this rule was the 2002 campaign, where "equidistance" to CDU and SPD was claimed. Following German reunification in 1990, the FDP merged with the Association of Free Democrats, a grouping of liberals from East Germany. During the 1990s, the FDP won between 6.2 and 11 percent of the vote in Bundestag elections. Between 1982 and 1998, it served as the junior partner in the government of Chancellor Helmut Kohl of the CDU.
In the 2005 general election the party won 9.8 percent of the vote and 61 federal deputies, an unpredicted improvement from prior opinion polls. It is believed that this was partly due to tactical voting by CDU-CSU supporters who supported strong economic reforms. However, because the CDU did less well than predicted, the FDP and the CDU were unable to form a coalition government (a contrast to the situation after the 2002 federal election where a coalition between the two parties was impossible primarily because of the weak results of the FDP). Disagreements over social issues (the FDP taking a liberal stance, the CDU more conservative) also complicated a coalition agreement. The party was considered as a potential member of various possible political coalitions, following the election. One possibility was a partnership between the FDP, the Social Democrats and Greens, but most Free Democrats felt that the Social Democrats were not bold enough on economic reform. Also considered was a CDU-FDP-Green coalition (called "Jamaica Coalition" because of the party colours, the same as those of the Jamaican flag), but the Greens quickly ruled out participation in any coalition with the CDU-CSU (Joschka Fischer in particular dismissed the possibility out of hand). Instead, the CDU formed a grand coalition with the SPD, and the FDP entered the opposition. FDP leader Guido Westerwelle became Leader of the Opposition on account of the Free Democrats' position as the largest non-government party in the Bundestag.
The party's unofficial motto is "So viel Staat wie nötig, so wenig Staat wie möglich!" ("as much state as necessary, as little state as possible!)"
| Contents |
| Chairmen of the Free Democratic Party, 1948-present |
| See also |
| External links |
Chairmen of the Free Democratic Party, 1948-present
★ Theodor Heuss 1948-1949
★ Franz Blücher 1949-1954
★ Thomas Dehler 1954-1957
★ Reinhold Maier 1957-1960
★ Erich Mende 1960-1968
★ Walter Scheel 1968-1974
★ Hans-Dietrich Genscher 1974-1985
★ Martin Bangemann 1985-1988
★ Otto Graf Lambsdorff 1988-1993
★ Klaus Kinkel 1993-1995
★ Wolfgang Gerhardt 1995-2001
★ Guido Westerwelle 2001-
See also
★ Liberalism
★ Contributions to liberal theory
★ Liberalism worldwide
★ List of liberal parties
★ Liberal democracy
★ Liberalism in Germany
★ Friedrich Naumann Foundation
★ Young Liberals (Germany)
★ Liberal Students Association
★ Conservative liberalism
★ Social liberalism
External links
★ Free Democratic Party (FDP) official site
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