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  1. Ludwig Windthorst. Baron Ludwig von Windthorst (17 January 1812 – 14 March 1891) was a German politician and leader of the Catholic Centre Party and the most notable opponent of Chancellor Otto von Bismarck during the Prussian -led unification of Germany and the Kulturkampf. Margaret L. Anderson argues that he was "Imperial Germany's greatest ...

  2. From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. Jump to navigation Jump to search. German Centre Party. Deutsche Zentrumspartei. Federal Chairman: Christian Otte: Founder : Joseph Görres ...

  3. First, someone should create a redirect called Center Party (Germany) that redirects here, for the benefit of American readers. Second, the Centre Party played a key role in the development of labor laws (child labor, social security, maximum number of hours worked per week, etc.) in the 1880s and 1890s (beginning even before Bismarck's death ...

  4. Even before the reunification of Germany united on a joint congress in Hanover, the West German FDP united with the other parties to form the first all-German party. Both party factions brought the FDP a great, albeit short-lived, increase in membership. In the first all-German Bundestag elections, the CDU/CSU/FDP centre-right coalition was confirmed, the FDP received 11.0 percent of the valid ...

  5. The Christian Democratic Union of Germany or Christlich Demokratische Union Deutschlands (CDU) is one of the two main right of centre political parties in Germany. It describes itself as a Christian democratic and conservative party. In November 2005 the Federal leader of the CDU Angela Merkel became the Chancellor of the Federal Republic of ...

  6. The German Center Party (Deutsche Zentrumspartei) is a political party in Germany without parliamentary representation. It the successor of the pre-World War II Centre Party . In the first federal election (1949) the Centre-Party got 10 seats, in the second federal election (1953) the Centre-Party got 3 seats.

  7. In its 1959 Godesberg Program, the party dropped its commitment to Marxism and sought to appeal to middle class voters, becoming a big tent party of the centre-left. SPD membership statistics (in thousands) since 1945. Despite heavy losses since 1990, the SPD is still the largest party in Germany, ahead of the CDU.