Scholz cabinet

Scholz cabinet

24th Cabinet of the Federal Republic of Germany
8 December 2021 – 6 November 2024
(Incumbent as caretaker government)
Signing of the coalition agreement on 7 December 2021
Date formed8 December 2021
(2 years, 11 months and 2 days)
People and organisations
PresidentFrank-Walter Steinmeier
ChancellorOlaf Scholz
Vice ChancellorRobert Habeck
Member partiesSocial Democratic Party
Alliance 90/The Greens
Free Democratic Party (2021–2024)
Status in legislatureTraffic light coalition (2021–2024)
415 / 735 (56%)




Red-green coalition (minority) (from 2024)
325 / 733 (44%)




Opposition partiesChristian Democratic Union
Christian Social Union
Free Democratic Party (from 2024)
Alternative for Germany
The Left
Sahra Wagenknecht Alliance (from 2024)
Opposition leaderRalph Brinkhaus (CDU) (2021–2022)
Friedrich Merz (CDU) (from 2022)
History
Election2021 federal election
Legislature terms20th Bundestag
PredecessorMerkel IV

The Scholz cabinet (German: Kabinett Scholz, pronounced [kabiˈnɛt ʃɔlt͡s] ) is the current cabinet of Germany, led by Federal Chancellor Olaf Scholz. The cabinet is composed of Scholz's Social Democratic Party (SDP) and Alliance 90/The Greens. The Free Democratic Party (FDP) was a member of the cabinet until 7 November 2024 when the three-way coalition collapsed through Scholz's dismissal of FDP Finance Minister Christian Lindner. Scholz announced pursuing a snap election to be held in January 2025.[1][2]

The coalition of SDP, Greens and FDP was an arrangement known as a "traffic light coalition" in German politics after the parties' traditional colours, respectively red, yellow and green, matching the colours of a traffic light (Ampel). This traffic light coalition-government was the first of its kind at the federal level in the history of the German federal republic.

In 2023, a mid-term review of the coalition agreement's implementation found that compared to the preceding grand coalition (Merkel IV), the traffic light government had achieved 38 instead of 53 per cent of its coalition promises, which is proportionally less, but with 174 instead of 154 fulfilled promises, it had actually achieved somewhat more in absolute terms. This applies to the government's major reform projects as well as to smaller government projects.[3]

  1. ^ tagesschau.de. "Kanzler Scholz will im Januar Vertrauensfrage stellen". tagesschau.de (in German). Retrieved 2024-11-06.
  2. ^ "German government coalition collapses as Scholz sacks Finance Minister Lindner". POLITICO. 2024-11-06. Retrieved 2024-11-06.
  3. ^ "Mehr Koalition wagen". www.bertelsmann-stiftung.de (in German). Retrieved 2023-09-14.

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