This is Germany, it’s a country in Central
Europe that’s about the size of the US state
of Montana or slightly smaller than Japan.
If you’re still having any trouble finding
it, it’s right next to Słubice, Poland.
Germany’s federal government meets in the
capital and largest city of Berlin, so aside
from tourists taking selfies at Checkpoint
Charlie and people ordering döner kebabs,
what exactly goes on here in Berlin?
So yeah, this is Germany, also known as the
Federal Republic of Germany (Bundesrepublik
Deutschland), Germany’s government is best
described as a federal, parliamentary, representative
democratic republic.
For those of you who aren’t fluent in political-scientist-ese,
those terms mean that Germany’s government
is a federation of different states under
a non-monarchical government, which has different
people as the head of state and head of government
(I’ll explain the difference with that later),
and that there’s a layer of politicians
between the voters and the legislation.
Germany is also divided into 16 states, whose
German names in alphabetical order of their
English names are Baden-Württemberg, Bayern
(Bavaria), Berlin, Brandenburg, Bremen, Hamburg,
Hessen (Hesse), Mecklenburg-Vorpommern (Mecklenburg-Western
Pomerania), Niedersachsen (Lower Saxony),
Nordrhein-Westfalen (North Rhine-Westphalia),
Rheinland-Pfalz (Rhineland-Palatinate), Saarland,
Sachsen (Saxony), Sachsen-Anhalt (Saxony-Anhalt),
Schleswig-Holstein, and Thüringen (Thuringia).
Some of these states might have familiar names
from European history (be it from various
treaties or dogs) as many of them stem from
the kingdoms that once ruled these lands,
although now these states manage local affairs
that the federal government can’t (and probably
shouldn’t) be bothered with.
These include things like schools, law enforcement,
healthcare, und so weiter.
States are often further divided into Regierungsbezirke
(governmental districts) and Kreise (districts)
of various types, all responsible for various
tasks even more local than what the state
can provide for.
Now, this is a video about how the German
national government works, so if you’re
more interested in how local government works
in Germany, I would highly recommend this
video from Rewboss.
Okay, back to the federal government, just
how does that work?
Well first, there are two major legislative
bodies, the Bundestag and the Bundesrat.
The Bundestag meets in the famous Reichstag
building and is the German parliament, while
the Bundesrat meets in the Preußisches Herrenhaus
(Prussian House of Lords) and represents the
state governments.
If you already know a bit about the US government,
think of the Bundestag like the House of Representatives,
and the Bundesrat as more like the Senate.
The German government also essentially has
two leaders, the President and the Chancellor.
The President is the head of state, which
means he (currently Frank-Walter Steinmeier)
presides over representational matters and
doesn’t have as many powers despite technically
being the most important person in the German
government, they really just preside over
legislation and make sure nothing goes wrong.
The second most is the President of the Bundestag
(Bundestagspräsident, currently Wolfgang
Schäuble) who is basically in charge of managing
the Bundestag and making sure everything is
in order, and is basically the German equivalent
of a speaker.
The Chancellor however (Bundeskanzlerin, currently
the world-famous Angela Merkel) is the head
of government, which means she appoints the
federal cabinet and basically runs the country.
Technically the Chancellor is officially only
ranked third in the German government, but
there’s a reason you’ve heard of Angela
Merkel.
Okay now for elections, which are a little
more complicated.
Not really to vote in, but more if you’re
the person organizing the new government.
Every five years a federal election is run,
and it is during this time that voters vote
for new representatives in the Bundestag (obviously
they also kind of, technically vote for the
Bundesrat, but just we’re going to focus
on the Bundestag for now because it’s easier
and more important).
The ballot they are sent essentially comes
in two parts, one for the person the voter
wants representing their constituency, and
another for which party the voter wants in
power.
You don’t have to vote correspondingly either,
if you’re a fan of the SPD but like the
FDP candidate more, you can vote both ways.
This means that you’re essentially electing
two halves of the 598 seats, 299 of which
go to local candidates, with the other 299
going to party representatives so that a political
party can get a more proportional amount of
seats for their votes, although this does
mean that the Bundestag may or may not go
over the seat number of 598, and so additional
overhang seats are often also given to balance
this out.
Overhang seats, and their cousins levelling
seats, however are an oh-so complicated situation
that’s probably best left for another time.
Just know that they’re additional seats
given depending on how the vote goes for a
particular party.
There are more than two main political parties
in Germany, in fact there are currently six
parties with seats in the Bundestag, which
in decreasing order of said seats are the
CDU/CSU (technically two parties in a kind
of union), the SPD, AfD, FDP, the Left, and
the Greens.
These aren’t exactly fringe parties either,
especially since a party needs at least 5%
of the popular vote to get a seat in government.
This means that a singular party rarely gets
a majority in government, and so they often
need to pair up with another party to get
legislation passed.
This is something called a coalition, and
the current government coalition is made up
of the CDU/CSU and the SPD, with the other
four parties forming what is known as the
opposition, although there’s of course a
lot of drama going on with this, so we shouldn’t
go too deep into this right now as this will
almost certainly change fast enough to make
this video outdated in a few months.
So to wrap it all up, here’s a diagram of
the German government.
It is a little bit confusing at first, but
so are most government diagrams to the unfamiliar
observer.
Okay, so let’s start with the normal German
voter, who is a German citizen over the age
of 18 who has lived at least 3 straight months
in Germany in the last 25 years up to the
election (which only applies if you’ve been
living outside of Germany).
So in this diagram, yellow boxes represent
the legislative branch, blue boxes the executive
branch, and gray boxes the judicial branch.
Green arrows mean that one body elects and/or
appoints another, blue arrows that one body
sends members to another, red arrows that
one formally appoints and/or has veto power
over another, and Three Arrows is a German
YouTube channel that’s completely unrelated
to this.
So starting with the normal voter, they elect
their state legislature and the federal diet.
The state legislature in turn appoints the
state constitutional court, the Minister-President,
and the appointed members of the Federal Convention.
The Minister-President appoints the State
Cabinet, and those two send members to the
Federal Council, which works with the Federal
Diet to appoint the Federal Constitutional
Court and enact legislation.
The Federal Diet meanwhile also sends members
to the Federal Convention, which elects the
President.
The President has veto power over the same
legislation we just breezed over, but also
formally appoints the Chancellor (who the
Federal Diet also elects) and the President
has veto power over the Federal Cabinet that
the Chancellor then appoints.
See, that wasn’t too bad, was it?
The German government is a big and powerful
player on the world stage.
Germany may be the size of Montana and have
a population smaller than Vietnam, but Germany
also has the fourth largest economy in the
world, which in turn makes it arguably one
of the “leaders” of the European Union
as a whole… so it’s kind of important
they get this whole thing right!
Thank you as always for watching.
If you weren’t familiar with the German
government beforehand, please let me know
if this video helped at all, and if you already
were please let me know how I did explaining
this as a dumb American.
As always, be sure to like and share this
video, check out the merch store on khanubis.tv,
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