1 / 12

Federal Republic of Germany

Federal Republic of Germany. Parliament and the Executive . Political Science Seminar Series. Title: Enforcing NAFO Regulations: A European Union Perspective Presented by: Michele Del Zompo, Senior Coordinator of Control Operations with the (EU) Community Fisheries Control Agency

ryo
Download Presentation

Federal Republic of Germany

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Federal Republic of Germany Parliament and the Executive

  2. Political Science Seminar Series • Title: Enforcing NAFO Regulations: A European Union Perspective • Presented by: Michele Del Zompo, Senior Coordinator of ControlOperations with the (EU) Community Fisheries Control Agency • When: Friday, November 16, 2007, 3:00pm • Where: Room A1045

  3. Research papers: PRELIMINARY OUTLINE Due Friday, November 16th This should lay out the argument of the paper in point form

  4. Final exam Saturday, Dec. 8th 9:00-11:00 AA1043

  5. Party system: A moderate multiparty system • 3-5 parties represented in the Bundestag • Parties disagree on extent of government intervention, as well as foreign policy, but • Substantial areas of agreement • Commitment to social market economy, welfare state

  6. The Chancellor Constitutional position -- strong • Elected by the Bundestag (lower house) • Appoints the cabinet • Constitutionally charged with responsibility for overall government policy • Can only be removed through a positive vote of non-confidence (Bundestag must elect a replacement)

  7. Limits on the chancellor’s power • Basic law also gives cabinet ministers constitutional responsibility for their own departments • Political limits: • Multiparty politics • Coalition government: In order get power, a chancellor must share power • Need to pilot legislation through both the Bundestag (lower house) and the Bundesrat (Federal Council, in which laender (provincial governments) have a veto

  8. German Chancellors Relatively few occupants: • Konrad Adenauer – CDU (1949-63) • Ludwig Erhard – CDU (1963-66) • Kurt Kiesinger – CDU (1966-69) • Willie Brandt – SPD (1969-1974) • Helmut Schmidt – SPD (1974-82) • Helmut Kohl – CDU (1982-98) • Gerhard Schroeder – SPD (1998-2004) • Angela Merkel (2004-present)

  9. Chancellors and their power: Political position: • Typically: • leader of the largest party • Winner of the last election • Position within cabinet: • Unlike British PM, unable to shuffle at will • However, strong backing from the chancellery – like the Cabinet Secretariat, a strong central agency • Need to maintain political authority within his party and the country as a whole

  10. Stronger: Adenauer Schmidt Kohl Middling: Kiesinger Brandt Schroeder Weaker: Erhard Stronger and weaker chancellors:

  11. Gerhard Schroeder’s position • Leads a divided SPD • Narrowly based coalition: • SPD and Greens have a narrow 10 seat majority • Decreasing popularity • Impact of recent provincial elections • Uncertain international stature

  12. Comparing the British Prime Minister and the German Chancellor: • Which (if either) is most capable of acting without first securing the consent of others?

More Related