Community council The municipal held an election on 26 March 2006 and yielded the following results: The town executive (
Magistrat) is made up of nine city councillors plus the mayor, and a total of 37 representatives. There are three committees of the City Council: the Main and Finance Committee
(Haupt- und Finanzausschuss), the Building and Environmental Committee
(Bau- und Umweltausschuss), and the Cultural and Social Committee
(Kultur- und Sozialausschuss). As of January 2021, the City Council's chairwoman is Christiane Ludwig-Paul.
Mayor From 1993 to 2011, the mayor was Klaus Jäger (independent). He was re-elected on 7 February 1999 with 85.2% of the vote, and again on 13 February 2005 with 70.6%. Since 2011 the mayor has been Christian Schönung (CDU).
Coat of arms Lorsch's
arms might be described thus: Party per fess, above sable the King's Hall Or, below party per pale, argent a cross pattée fitchy gules and azure the Lion of Hesse springing. The King's Hall (
Königshalle), the building declared a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1991, is borne as a
charge in the town's arms. The red cross pattée fitchy (that is, cross with “flattened” ends to three of the arms, and a point on the bottom one) is the coat of arms formerly borne by the Lorsch Abbey in its heyday. The Lion of Hesse, shown here springing (with both hindfeet on the ground) rather than rampant (with only one hindfoot on the ground), comes from Hesse's coat of arms (in which he is rampant) and symbolizes Lorsch's status as part of Hesse.
Town twinning •
Le Coteau,
Loire,
France since 1988 •
Zwevegem,
West Flanders,
Belgium since 1973 •
Thal, an outlying centre of Ruhla,
Thuringia since 1990 There is also a friendship arrangement with: •
Šternberk,
Olomouc Region,
Czech Republic. This came about through the sponsorship arrangement for those ethnic Germans
driven out of the communities of Jívová (formerly Giebau), Pohorsch, Weska and Hraničné Petrovice (Petersdorf bei Giebau), who then settled in Lorsch. ==Arts and culture==