People's Chamber


People's Chamber
Volkskammer
Type
Type unicameral parliament
(until 1958 lower chamber)
Timeline
Country German Democratic Republic (East Germany)
Established 1949
Preceded by Reichstag
Succeeded by Bundestag
Disbanded 1990
Leadership and Structure
Members 400
Election
Meeting place
Bundesarchiv Bild 183-1990-0419-418, Berlin, Volkskammer während Regierungserklärung von Lothar de Maiziere.jpg
Palast der Republik

The People's Chamber (German: Volkskammer) was the unicameral legislature of the German Democratic Republic (East Germany). From its founding in 1949 until the first free elections on 18 March 1990, all members of the Volkskammer were elected on a slate controlled by the Socialist Unity Party of Germany (SED), called the National Front. Despite the appearance of a multi-party system, all opposition parties were effectively controlled by the dominant SED[citation needed]. In addition, seats were also allocated to various mass organizations affiliated with the SED, such as the Free German Youth.

Initially, it existed alongside the Chamber of States, but in 1952 the states of East Germany (and with it the chamber) were suppressed.

In theory, the Volkskammer was the central political body of the GDR, appointing the Council of State (after 1960), the Council of Ministers, and the National Defence Council. However, parties were expected to respect democratic centralism, with the most dissent in voting ever shown by Parliament to the SED were fourteen nays and eight abstentions on the part of CDU representatives in a vote on liberalising abortion law.

A typical slate was as follows:

Party/Group Acronym Members
Socialist Unity Party of Germany SED 127
Free German Trade Union Federation FDGB 68
Christian Democratic Union CDU 52
Liberal Democratic Party of Germany LDPD 52
Democratic Farmers' Party of Germany DBD 52
National Democratic Party of Germany NDPD 52
Free German Youth FDJ 50
Democratic Women's League of Germany DFD 35
Cultural Association of the DDR KB 22

In 1976, the Volkskammer moved into a specially-constructed building on Marx-Engels-Platz (now Schloßplatz again), the Palast der Republik (Palace of the Republic).

Protestor, January 1990
Ballot for the 1990 elections (Text reads "Sample")

After the 1990 elections, the only legitimate elections in East Germany, the disposition of the parties was as follows:

Party/Group Acronym Members
Alliance for Germany CDU, DA, DSU 192
Social Democratic Party of Germany SPD 88
Party of Democratic Socialism PDS, former SED 66
Association of Free Democrats DFP, FDP, LDP 21
Alliance 90 B90 12
East German Green Party and Independent Women's Association Grüne, UFV 8
National Democratic Party of Germany NDPD 2
Democratic Women's League of Germany DFD 1
United Left VL 1

Chairmen of the People's Chamber

Chairmen of the People's Chamber were

Johannes Dieckmann LDPD 1949-1969
Gerald Goetting CDU 1969-1976
Horst Sindermann SED 1976-1989
Günther Maleuda DBD 1989-1990

Chairwoman of the People's Chamber and head of state of the German Democratic Republic was

Name Took office Left office Political Party
Sabine Bergmann-Pohl 5 April 1990 2 October 1990 CDU

because the State Council had been abolished.

See also

External links







stock | retire | vm
Why are we here?
All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License
This page is cache of Wikipedia. History