(SPD) and Chancellor
Konrad Adenauer (CDU) In the
North German Confederation and the
German Empire (1871–1918), the Chancellor was appointed by the
German Emperor; the people and the
Reichstag elected by them had no say in the appointment of this office. In the
Weimar Republic (1918–1933), the Reichstag was granted a destructive
vote of no confidence, which led to the resignation of the Chancellor, while the appointment of the Chancellor remained the responsibility of the head of state, the
Reich President. Accordingly, the nomination of candidates for Chancellor was not yet common practice, any more than it was in the first years of the
Federal Republic after 1949; the nomination of a Chancellor was rather a subject of
coalition negotiations and was only carried out after the election by the winning party alliance. A development that only came to a provisional conclusion in the course of the
1950s brought about a change here: the concentration of voters on a few competitive parties and the associated development of the
CDU,
CSU and
SPD into
large popular parties with the prospect of an absolute majority of seats in parliament or an alliance with a smaller coalition partner. Only now could these parties realistically claim that their candidate would actually be elected Chancellor in the event of an
election victory. Before
Willy Brandt was expressly nominated as a candidate for Chancellor for the first time in 1960, the respective party and parliamentary group leaders of the opposition were considered "natural" candidates. presented himself as a candidate for chancellor in accordance with "", with the aim of receiving 18 percent of the vote. He received 7.4 percent. After the nomination of a candidate for chancellor had long been made only by the two major parties represented in the
Bundestag, the
CDU/CSU and SPD, the FDP also nominated a candidate for chancellor for the first time in the
2002 German federal election with its chairman
Guido Westerwelle. The nomination was made with the aim of appearing in a personalized media environment on an equal footing with the candidates for chancellor
Gerhard Schröder (SPD) and
Edmund Stoiber (CDU/CSU), and as a supplement to the official election goal of achieving 18 percent of the
second vote ("”). The attempt to force participation in the television debates () of the candidates Schröder and Stoiber by means of a court decision resulted in a defeat for the FDP before the
Federal Constitutional Court:Guido Westerwelle’s appearance as candidate for chancellor was commented on by the media in a critical and even malicious manner; even Westerwelle himself later described his nomination as "candidate for chancellor" as a mistake. For the
2021 German federal election,
Annalena Baerbock was nominated as the first candidate for chancellor by
Alliance 90/The Greens, after the party was continuously certified as the second strongest force after the
CDU/CSU and thus also ahead of the
SPD from around October 2018 to July 2021. However, the high poll ratings could not be confirmed in the election, as the Greens only became the third strongest force, while the SPD with its candidate
Olaf Scholz even narrowly won the election ahead of the CDU/CSU. After the election, however, the party became part of the
traffic light coalition under Scholz and provided the Vice Chancellor with Economics Minister
Robert Habeck, while Baerbock was appointed Foreign Minister. For the
2025 German federal election, the
AfD nominated its first female candidate for chancellor,
Alice Weidel. In the run-up to the election, the AfD had consistently ranked second in polls behind the CDU/CSU. The
BSW followed suit with the appointment of
Sahra Wagenknecht. == Chancellor candidates since 1949 ==