Source: https://www.wikiyy.com/en/Referendums_in_Germany
Timestamp: 2019-11-20 12:22:17
Document Index: 68722308

Matched Legal Cases: ['Art. 59', '§ 25', 'Art. 71', 'Art. 63', 'Art. 59', '§ 10', 'Art. 22', '§13', 'Art. 70', '§ 8', 'Art. 50', '§ 6', 'Art. 124', '§ 1', 'Art. 60', '§ 11', '§ 1', 'Art. 48', '§ 12', '§ 62', 'Art. 2', '§ 6', '§ 2', 'Art. 107', '§ 61', '§ 75', 'Art. 61', '§ 2', '§ 1', 'Art. 70', '§ 16', 'Art. 81', '§ 10', 'Art. 42', '§ 11', 'Art. 81', '§ 9', 'Art. 29', '§ 14', '§ 1', 'Art. 29', 'art 21', 'Art. 72', '§ 20', 'Art. 29']

Referendums in Germany - Wikiyy
Referendums in Germany are an element of direct democracy. On the federal level only two types of a mandatory binding referendum exist – in changing the constitution and in changing the state territories.
All states have an enacted laws for popular indirect initiatives allowing to collect signatures for a request to the government. The government may issue a poll on any topic whereas the outcome is usually non-binding. The German referendum system has three types
Volksbegehren (literally people's request) is a citizens' initiative – if the government ignores the request it could directly lead into a "Volksentscheid"
Volksbefragung (literally people's inquiry) is non-binding facultative ballot question and the most common type of referendums
Volksentscheid (literally people's decision) is a binding plebiscite but this type is only used if the constitution requires it (mandatory).
The term Volksinitiative (people's initiative) is a synonym of Volksbegehren and it is the official term in Switzerland. On the municipal level the three types are paralleled with
Bürgerbegehren (literally citizens' request) as the local citizens' initiative
Bürgerbefragung (literally citizens' inquiry) for a local ballot question and
Bürgerentscheid (literally citizens' decision) for local plebiscite.
Note that in the city states the state citizens' initiative types are commonly called Bürgerbegehren while being at the same legal level as Volksbegehren in other Bundesländer states. Note that the term "Bürgerinitiative" (literally citizens' initiative) is used informally for non-partisan local campaign organizations (political action groups).
1 Federal Concept
2 Bundesländer
3 Initiative Quorum
4 Notable referendums in Germany
Federal Concept[edit]
Following World War II the new republic was founded with only minor elements of direct democracy. On the federal level there are only two mandatory constitutional referendum types – one is in case of enacting a new constitution (although changes to the constitution do not require a public vote and there is no provision for an initiative for a constitutional amendment) that has never been used although there was an argument in that direction during German reunification. The other type requires a public vote in case of restructuring the Bundesländer (states) ("Neugliederung des Bundesgebietes") which led to a referendum on the union of Baden and Württemberg into Baden-Württemberg in 1951 (accepted) and a referendum on the union of Berlin and Brandenburg into Berlin-Brandenburg in 1996 (rejected).
Bundesländer[edit]
Originally none of the Bundesländer states had provisions for a general binding referendum ("Volksentscheid"). Only Hesse and Bavaria have a mandatory binding referendum on changes to the state constitution. Most states do however have a form of a general non-binding ballot question ("Volksbefragung") which has been used rarely however – the most important one had been the 1955 Saar Statute referendum.
General forms of direct democracy were first introduced in the communities with facultative ballot questions ("Bürgerbefragung") and public initiatives ("Bürgerbegehren") that are both non-binding. In some areas this has been expanded into a binding referendum type ("Bürgerentscheid") but almost universally facultative.
In some states there is however a general right on state popular initiatives ("Volksbegehren") which was used in Hamburg to push the state government to pass a law on a facultative binding state referendum ("Volksentscheid") in 2007.
Initiative Quorum[edit]
Following World War II the right to petition to the government was installed with high barriers. Any popular initiative had to filed with the authorities and the signatories have to identify before their signature is accepted. This is called "Amtseintragung" (literally administrative inscription) in most legal areas. The other type is commonly referred to as "Freie Sammlung" (literally free collection) where letters may be accumulated before being handed over. Naturally some of the latter signatures are found to be illegal which can be a source of dispute.
In order to push the government the initiative must reach a certain amount of valid signatures. The "quorum" is defined differently by each Bundesländer state.
concepts of referendums and initiatives in Germany
referendum provisions
initiative requirements
signatory quorum
time limit / collection type
exclusion of topics
Baden-Württemberg Art. 59 und 60 of the state constitution;
§§ 25–39 of the Volksabstimmungsgesetz 16,67 %
Amtseintragung Abgabengesetze,
Besoldungsgesetze,
Staatshaushaltsgesetz
Bavaria Art. 71, 72 und 74 of the state constitution;
Art. 63–74 of the Landeswahlgesetz 10 %
Amtseintragung Staatshaushalt
see also: → de:Volksgesetzgebung in Bayern
Berlin Art. 59, 62, 63 of the state constitution;
§§ 10–28 of the Abstimmungsgesetz 7% (20% for constitutional changes)
Freie Sammlung Landeshaushaltsgesetz, Abgaben,
Tarife öffentlicher Unternehmen,
see also: → de:Volksgesetzgebung in Berlin
Brandenburg Art. 22 of the state constitution;
§§13–25, 56 und 60 of the Volksabstimmungsgesetz 80.000 (200.000
when demanding reelections)
Amtseintragung Landeshaushalt,
Abgaben, Personalentscheidungen
Bremen Art. 70 und 71 of the state constitution;
§§ 8–21 of the "Gesetz über das Verfahren beim Volksentscheid" 10% (20% when demanding constitutional changes or reelections)
Freie Sammlung Haushaltsplan, Dienstbezüge,
Hamburg Art. 50 der state constitution;
§§ 6–17 des Volksabstimmungsgesetzes 5 %
Freie Sammlung Bundesratsinitiativen,
Haushaltspläne, Abgaben,
Tarife der öffentlichen Unternehmen,
Dienst- und Versorgungsbezüge
see also: → de:Volksgesetzgebung (Hamburg)
Hessen Art. 124 of the state constitution;
§§ 1–15 of the Volksbegehrensgesetz 20 %
Amtseintragung Haushaltsplan,
Abgabengesetze,
Besoldungsordnungen,
Mecklenburg-Vorpommern Art. 60 of the state constitution;
§§ 11–17 of the VaG;
§§ 1–8 of the Durchführungsverordnung 120.000
Freie Sammlung Haushaltsgesetze,
Niedersachen Art. 48 of the state constitution;
§§ 12–23 of the Volksabstimmungsgesetz;
§ 62d of the Geschäftsordnung des Landtages 10 %
Freie Sammlung Landeshaushalt,
öffentliche Abgaben,
Nordrhein-Westfalen Art. 2, 68 und 69 of the state constitution;
§§ 6–21 of the VIVBVEG;
§§ 2–8 of the Durchführungsverordnung VIVBVEG 8 %
Amtseintragung Finanzfragen,
Besoldungsordnungen
Rheinland-Pfalz Art. 107–109 of the state constitution;
§§ 61–76 of the Landeswahlgesetz;
§§ 75–83 of the Landeswahlordnung 300.000
Saarland Art. 61, 99 und 100 of the state constitution;
§§ 2–13 of the Volksabstimmungsgesetz;
§§ 1–7 of the Volksabstimmungsordnung 20 %
Amtseintragung may not include topics with financial implications,[1]
Abgaben, Besoldungen,
Staatsleistungen, Staatshaushalt,
Sachsen Art. 70, 72–74 of the state constitution;
§§ 16–25 des VVVG 450.000
6–8 months[2]
Freie Sammlung Abgaben-, Besoldungs-,
Sachsen-Anhalt Art. 81 of the state constitution;
§§ 10–19 of the Volksabstimmungsgesetz 11 %
Besoldungsregelungen
Schleswig-Holstein Art. 42 der state constitution;
§§ 11–19 of the Volksabstimmungsgesetz 5 %
Thüringen Art. 81 und 82 of the state constitution;
§§ 9–18 of the "Gesetzes über Verfahren beim Bürgerantrag, Volksbegehren und Volksentscheid" 10% (8%)
4 months (2 months)
Freie Sammlung (Amtseintragung) Landeshaushalt,
Abgaben und Personalentscheidungen
Bundesrepublik Deutschland[3] Art. 29 GG Abs. 4–6 GG;
§§ 14, 24, 26 und 36 of the law on referendums and initiatives ("Gesetzes über das Verfahren bei Volksentscheid, Volksbegehren und Volksbefragung") in 29 GG Abs. 6 GG
§§ 1–45 und 93 of the regulation on conduct ("Verordnung zur Durchführung des Gesetzes nach Art. 29 GG Abs. 6 GG") 10% of the voters
in the affected area the referendum may only target questions of territory changes (see de:Neugliederung des Bundesgebietes")
Notable referendums in Germany[edit]
Territory of the Saar Basin (1920-1935)
1955 Saar Statute referendum
Eastern Germany (1949–1990)
1951 East German referendum
1954 East German referendum
1968 East German referendum
post-1990 Germany
1995 Bavarian referendum on introduction of local referendums
1998 Bavarian referendum on the abolition of the Bavarian Senate
2010 Bavarian referendum on a smoking ban in gastronomy
2011 Baden-Württemberg referendum on Stuttgart 21
2011 Berlin water referendum
2013 Berlin energy referendum
^ Die Formulierung in der saarländischen Verfassung ist die restriktivste in Deutschland. Faktisch sind alle Volksbegehren unzulässig, die irgendeine finanzielle Auswirkung haben würden, also auch Gesetzesvorschläge die Einsparungen zur Folge hätten.
^ Art. 72 Sächsische Verfassung sieht vor, dass die Frist mindestens 6 Monate beträgt, § 20 VVVG bestimmt, dass die Frist maximal 8 Monate beträgt.
^ Ein Volksbegehren ist nur für den Fall der Gebietsneugliederung nach Art. 29 GG Abs. 4–6 GG möglich. Das Volksbegehren findet nicht bundesweit, sondern nur in dem eine Neugliederung begehrendem Gebiet statt.