) In the
German Bundestag, according to Section 10 Paragraph 4 of the , a group can be recognised if its members do not reach the minimum parliamentary group size. Groups were not initially provided for in the rules of procedure. However, as early as the third meeting, the
National Rights group was formed from five members, which later renamed itself the
German Reich Party group, grew to nine representatives in the meantime and disbanded in September 1950. After the
All-German Bloc/League of Expellees and Deprived of Rights (BHE) was founded in October 1950, five representatives formed the BHE/DG group. Four of the BHE members came from the
Economic Reconstruction Association (WAV)
fraktion, which lost its faction status and also acted as a group until December 1951. Groups have been provided for in the Rules of Procedure of the German Bundestag since January 1952. At the same time, the minimum size of a parliamentary group was increased from ten to 15 members. With the increase in the minimum size of parliamentary groups, the parliamentary fraktion of the
Communist Party of Germany lost its parliamentary status and formed a group. In April 1953, five members of the WAV formed a group again. On 14 July 1955, a group of former members of the
GB/BHE parliamentary group, the so-called
Kraft/Oberländer group, was founded in the
2nd German Bundestag. All members joined the as guests the following day. On 15 March 1956, 14 MPs left the
Free Democratic Party (FDP) and formed the
Working Group of Free Democrats, later
the Democratic Working Group. From October 26, 1956, this group had 15 members and thus parliamentary group status; it was finally called ''the Bundestag parliamentary group of the
Free People's Party''. This group also formed a
technical working group with the DP parliamentary group, with which it eventually merged. In the 3rd German Bundestag, the
German Party parliamentary group lost its parliamentary group status on 1 July 1960 when nine members left; the remaining six members formed a group. In 1961, more MPs left the DP, and the three remaining members of the party, now called
Gesamtdeutsche Partei (GDP), remained without a parliamentary group. At the beginning of the
5th Bundestag, the minimum size of a parliamentary group was set at five percent of the MPs. The 24 representatives from the
Party of Democratic Socialism (PDS) who were members of the
11th German Bundestag after
reunification on October 3, 1989, formed a group. In the
12th German Bundestag (1990–94),
Alliance 90/The Greens with eight seats and the PDS with 17 seats each formed a group. Both parties had only overcome the barrier clause in the eastern electoral district, a special rule for the first election after reunification. In the
13th German Bundestag (1994–98), the PDS was again represented as a group with 30 representatives. The party had missed the , but entered the Bundestag through the
basic mandate clause. In contrast, the two PDS representatives
Gesine Lötzsch and
Petra Pau, who were directly elected to the
15th Bundestag in the
2002 federal election, were denied recognition as a group due to the small size of the planned group. Following the decision to dissolve the
Die Linke faction on 6 December 2023, the 28 remaining members of
Die Linke were granted group status on 2 February 2024. The ten members of the
Bündnis Sahra Wagenknecht, who had previously left the
Die Linke, were also recognised as a group on 2 February 2024. After the
2025 federal election both groups were dissolved, the BSW lost all its seats and Die Linke once again formed a faction. == Groups in German state parliaments ==