1954 West German presidential election

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An indirect presidential election (officially the 2nd Federal Convention) was held in West Germany on 17 July 1954. The government parties and the opposition SPD renominated incumbent Theodor Heuss. Against his wishes, the Communist Party of Germany nominated Alfred Weber. Heuss was reelected on the first ballot with about 85% of the vote.

Quick facts Nominee, Party ...
1954 West German presidential election

 1949
17 July 1954
1959 
 
Nominee Theodor Heuss Alfred Weber
Party FDP KPD
Electoral vote 871 12

President before election

Theodor Heuss
FDP

Elected President

Theodor Heuss
FDP

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Composition of the Federal Convention

The president is elected by the Federal Convention consisting of all the members of the Bundestag and an equal number of delegates representing the states. These are divided proportionally by population to each state, and each state's delegation is divided among the political parties represented in its parliament so as to reflect the partisan proportions in the parliament.

More information Party, Members ...
By party[1]
Party Members
CDU/CSU 431
SPD 347
FDP 112
DP 15
BP 15
Z 12
KPD 10
Hamburg-Block 9
SSW 1
DRP 1
Independents 4
Total 1018
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More information State, Members ...
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Results

More information Candidate, Parties ...
Candidate Parties Votes %
Theodor HeussCDU/CSU, SPD, FDP, DP87185.6
Alfred WeberKPD121.2
Others160.6
Abstentions959.3
Invalid votes30.3
Not cast313.0
Total1,018100
Source:[2]
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Note:1. In addition to the two formally nominated candidates President of the Reich Karl Dönitz, Prince Louis Ferdinand of Prussia, Marie Elisabeth Lüders, Prince Ernest Augustus of Hanover, Franz-Josef Wuermeling, and Chancellor Konrad Adenauer received one vote each.

References

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