South Schleswig Voters' Association

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Template:Infobox political party The South Schleswig Voters' Association<ref group=nb>Other translations include South Schleswig Voter Alliance, South Schleswig Voters' Committee, South Schleswig Voter Federation, South Schleswig Voters Group, South Schleswig Voters League, South Schleswig Voters List, South Schleswig Voters' Union, South Schleswig Electoral Association.</ref> (Template:Langx, SSW; Template:Langx, SSV) is a regionalist political party in Schleswig-Holstein in northern Germany. The party represents the Danish and Frisian minorities of the state.<ref name="Marten2015">Template:Cite book</ref><ref name="Mathias2012">Template:Cite book</ref>

As a party representing a national minority, the SSW declines to identify itself with a scale of left–right politics but models its policies on the Nordic model, which often means favouring a strong welfare state, while favouring a more free-market labour policy than the German social market economy model.<ref name="Magone2011"/> In 2011 it was defined as socially liberal by multiple authors.<ref name="Magone2011">Template:Cite book</ref><ref name="Decker & Neu"/> The SSW is represented in the Landtag of Schleswig-Holstein and several regional and municipal councils. The party contested federal elections in Germany until 1961, before returning in 2021,<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> where it obtained one seat, and in 2025, where it once again obtained a seat in the Bundestag.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

As a party for the national Danish minority in Southern Schleswig, the SSW is not subject to the general requirement of passing a 5% vote threshold to gain proportional seats in either the state parliament (Landtag) or the federal German parliament (Bundestag).<ref name="Marten2015"/> However, the party is not guaranteed representation and must still win enough votes to qualify for a seat.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> In the most recent 2022 state election, the SSW received 5.7% of the votes and four seats. In the 2021 federal elections, the SSW stood in a federal election for the first time since 1961; the official final result gave them one seat, making Stefan Seidler a Member of Parliament, their first such member since the 1953 federal elections.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

History

In the 2005 state election, the SSW received 3.6% (two seats). This was enough for the SSW to hold the balance of power between the national parties of the left and right, and the SSW chose to support a coalition of the Social Democratic Party of Germany (SPD) and The Greens, without joining the coalition itself.<ref name="Magone2011"/> This resulted in criticism from the Christian Democratic Union (CDU) and from German national conservative circles, who asserted that since the SSW had been granted a special status, it was obliged to defend only minority interests, and that its status should be revoked if the SSW behaved like a "regular" party. The SSW representatives, however, insisted on the full value of their parliamentary seats and their equal rights as German citizens. One particular point was that the SSW had taken a strong position on educational principles in the state, advocating for abolishing the traditional German system of dividing pupils according to academic ability after the 4th grade (approximately aged 10 years old) into different types of secondary schools. The CDU argued that since there were separate Danish-language schools, it was unreasonable for the SSW to involve itself in the affairs of the public schools.

As the planned SPD-Greens coalition did not make it into office after the 2009 state election, a centre-right coalition was formed between the CDU and Free Democratic Party (FDP), and the SSW joined the opposition.

In the 2012 state election, the SSW gained 4.6% of all votes and three seats in the state Landtag.<ref name="StatAmt">Template:Cite web</ref> A coalition of the SPD, Greens and SSW was concluded in June 2012, and the former parliamentary leader, Anke Spoorendonk, was appointed Minister for Culture, Justice and European Affairs.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> This was the first time in German history that a minority party had participated in a state government. The new coalition government had plenty of nicknames, for instance "Dänen-Ampel" ("Dane-traffic light"), "Schleswig-Holstein-Ampel", "rot-grün-blaue Koalition" or "rød-grøn-blå koalition" (red–green–blue alliance), "Küstenkoalition" (Coastal alliance) and "Nord-Ampel" (North traffic light).

In the 2017 state election, the SSW backed to 3.3% of the votes, but retained three seats in the Landtag. However, since the government coalition parties lost their Landtag majority, a new government was formed without the SSW, which again joined the opposition. Exempt from the threshold of 5%, it won a seat in the 2021 German federal election with 0.1% of the vote nationwide, its first federal seat since the inaugural 1949 West German federal election.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref><ref>Template:Cite news</ref> Though unlikely to change the balance of power in any way, Stefan Seidler sits as its Member of the German Bundestag.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>

In the 2022 state election, the SSW again ran with Lars Harms as its top candidate. With 5.7%, the SSW achieved more than five percent of the vote for the first time since the state election in 1950. At the end of 2024, Lars Harms resigned from his state parliament mandate and retired from politics. Michael Schunck took his place in the state parliament. Christian Dirschauer took over the parliamentary group chairmanship in the state parliament. For the 2025 federal election, the SSW aims to defend its seat in the Bundestag and hopes to gain a second seat. The party expects to need around 40,000 votes for the first seat and a total of 110,000 votes (6% of the second votes in Schleswig-Holstein) for the second seat.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

In the 2025 German federal election they held their seat from the previous election, putting them in sixth place in terms of seats in the Bundestag.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>

SSWUngdom

The Youth in the SSW (Danish: SSWUngdom, German: Jugend im SSW) is the youth wing of the South Schleswig Voter Federation. The current chairman is Maylis Roßberg.

Electoral results

Federal parliament (Bundestag)

Election Leader Constituency Party list Seats +/– Status
Votes % Votes %
DE SH DE SH
1949 Hermann Clausen 75,388 0.3 (#12) 5.4 (#5) Template:Composition bar Template:No2
1953 44,339 0.2 (#13) 3.3 (#6) 44,585 0.2 (#13) 3.3 (#6) Template:Composition bar Template:Decrease 1 Template:N/A
1957 33,463 0.1 (#10) 2.5 (#6) 32,262 0.1 (#11) 2.5 (#6) Template:Composition bar Template:Steady Template:N/A
1961 Berthold Bahnsen 24,951 0.1 (#8) 1.8 (#5) 25,449 0.1 (#9) 1.9 (#5) Template:Composition bar Template:Steady Template:N/A
Did not contest (1965–2017)
2021 Stefan Seidler 35,027 0.1 (#17) 2.0 (#7) 55,578 0.1 (#17) 3.2 (#7) Template:Composition bar Template:Increase 1 Template:No2
2025 58,773 0.1 (#14) 3.1 (#6) 76,126 0.1 (#15) 4.0 (#6) Template:Composition bar Template:Steady Template:No2

Landtag of Schleswig-Holstein

Election Leader Votes % Seats +/– Status
1947 Samuel Münchow 99,500 9.3% Template:Composition bar Template:Increase 6 Template:No2
1950 71,864 5.5% Template:Composition bar Template:Decrease 2 Template:No2
1954 42,242 3.5 % Template:Composition bar Template:Decrease 4 Template:No2
1958 Berthold Bahnsen 34,136 2.8% Template:Composition bar Template:Increase 2 Template:No2
1962 26,883 2.3% Template:Composition bar Template:Decrease 1 Template:No2
1967 23,577 1.9% Template:Composition bar Template:Steady Template:No2
1971 19,720 1.4% Template:Composition bar Template:Steady Template:No2
1975 Karl Otto Meyer 20,703 1.4% Template:Composition bar Template:Steady Template:No2
1979 22,293 1.4% Template:Composition bar Template:Steady Template:No2
1983 21,807 1.3% Template:Composition bar Template:Steady Template:No2
1987 23,316 1.5% Template:Composition bar Template:Steady Template:No2
1988 26,643 1.7% Template:Composition bar Template:Steady Template:No2
1992 28,245 1.9% Template:Composition bar Template:Steady Template:No2
1996 Anke Spoorendonk 38,285 2.5% Template:Composition bar Template:Increase 1 Template:No2
2000 60,367 4.1% Template:Composition bar Template:Increase 1 Template:No2
2005 51,920 3.6% Template:Composition bar Template:Decrease 1 Template:No2
2009 69,701 4.3% Template:Composition bar Template:Increase 2 Template:No2
2012 61,025 4.6% Template:Composition bar Template:Decrease 1 Template:Yes2
2017 Lars Harms 48,968 3.3% Template:Composition bar Template:Steady Template:No2
2022 78,969 5.7% Template:Composition bar Template:Increase 1 Template:No2

Leadership

Christian Dirschauer is the party chairman of the SSW.

Leader of the SSW

Leader Year
style="background:Template:Party color; color:white;" | 1 Svend Johannsen 1948–1949
style="background:Template:Party color; color:white;" | 2 Samuel Münchow 1949–1950
style="background:Template:Party color; color:white;" | 3 Hermann Clausen 1950–1956
style="background:Template:Party color; color:white;" | 4 Friedrich Mommsen 1956–1960
style="background:Template:Party color; color:white;" | 5 Karl Otto Meyer 1960–1975
style="background:Template:Party color; color:white;" | 6 Gerhard Wehlitz 1975–1989
style="background:Template:Party color; color:white;" | 7 Wilhelm Klüver 1989–1997
style="background:Template:Party color; color:white;" | 8 Gerda Eichhorn 1997–2005
style="background:Template:Party color; color:white;" | 9 Flemming Meyer 2005–2021
style="background:Template:Party color; color:white;" | 10 Christian Dirschauer 2021–present

Notes

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See also

Germany:

Northern Schleswig before 1920:

Denmark:

References

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Template:Parties of Germany Template:Members of the European Free Alliance

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