| • Science | • People | • Locations | • Timeline |
This article is part of the series Politics of Germany |
| Constitution |
| Federal Government Parliament Federal Council Federal Assembly Constitutional Court |
| President Chancellor Federal Ministers |
| States of Germany Districts of Germany |
| Elections Political Parties: SPD | CDU/ CSU Greens | FDP | PDS NPD | DVU | REP |
The Christian Social Union in Bavaria (CSU – Christlich-Soziale Union in Bayern e.V.) is a conservative political party in Germany. It operates exclusively in the state of Bavaria, while its sister party CDU operates in the rest of the country. Only in 1957 in the state of Saarland the CSU ran against CDU candidates, but this section of the CSU later merged with the CDU.
The CSU has led the Bavarian state government practically since it came into existence, and without the need for a coalition government for most of the time. This level of dominance is unique in post-war Germany. On the federal level, it forms a common faction in the Bundestag (Federal Diet) with the CDU. Edmund Stoiber took over the CSU chairmanship early in 1999. He ran for chancellor in 2002, but lost. In 2003 the CSU was re-elected as the Bavarian government with an overall majority. Franz Josef Strauss ( 1915- 19881988 is a leap year starting on Friday (click on link for calendar). Events January January 2 Georgia celebrates its bicentennial statehood. January 9 Connecticut celebrates its bicentennial statehood. January 26 Australia celebrates its bicentennial day.) is seen as having set the ideological basis of the party, although he was too young to be a founding leader of the party, which began as a continuation of the Weimar-era Bavarian People's PartyThe Bavarian People's Party Bayerische Volkspartei was the Bavarian branch of the Centre Party, which broke off from the rest of the party in 1919 to pursue a more conservative, Bavarian particularist, course. There was a period of near separatism in the.