Electing Germany's President
May 22, 2004This year's presidential election will be a break with tradition: While German heads of state are normally career politicians, the country's next figurehead will enter the presidency from the sidelines.
Horst Köhler, the nominee of Christian Democrats and the neo-liberal Free Democrats for the largely ceremonial position, last worked as head of the International Monetary Fund. Gesine Schwan, the choice of Social Democrats and Greens, is a political scientist and currently serves as president of the Viadrina European University in Frankfurt (Oder) near the Polish border.
As Germany's president is not elected directly, 1,205 members of the so-called federal assembly will choose between Köhler and Schwan in Berlin on Sunday. The assembly includes all members of Germany's lower house, the Bundestag, and an equal number of representatives from the 16 federal states, including many celebrities.
Köhler's victory is all but certain as conservatives have a majority in the assembly. But Schwan has been leading in public opinion polls, raising the question whether some conservative voters in the assembly might forget party allegiances and elect a female president for the first time in the federal republic's history.
Below you can find a compilation of DW-WORLD articles on the search for Germany's next president.