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Home > Politics of Germany


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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 Federal Republic of Germany (in German: Bundesrepublik Deutschland) is a federal representative democracy.

Its political system is laid out in the 1949 constitution, the Grundgesetz (Basic Law), which remained in effect with minor amendments after 1990's German Reunification. The constitution emphasizes the protection of individual liberty in an extensive catalogue of human rights and also divides powers both between the federal and state levels and between the legislative, executive, and judicial branches, respectively. In many ways, the 1949 Grundgesetz is a strong response to the perceived flaws of the failed 1919 Weimar Republic, which collapsed in favor of the dictatorship of the so-called Third Reich.

1 Federalism

The Federal Republic (Bundesrepublik) consists of 16 federal states ( Bundesländer). The Grundgesetz prescribes that legislature is to be handled by the states except where explicitly stated in the Grundgesetz itself. This principle has been quite reversed in practice through many amendments of the constitution since 1949, leaving basically only police, cultural and communal affairs to be handled by state legislature.

The political systems of the individual states are prescribed by state constitutions, but resemble that of the federal level to a certain extent. The heads of the federal states' governments are called Ministerpräsidenten (Minister-President) or --in case of the three city-states-- Regierender Bürgermeister (Governor-Mayor, in Berlin and Bremen) or Erster Bürgermeister (First Mayor, in Hamburg. They each form a state cabinet as well, although it is usually much smaller than the federal government. Elections for the parliaments of the Bundesländer occur every four to five years, depending on the state.



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