Germany

German government wants to let 16-year-olds vote

Germany's centre-left government wants to lower the voting age for nationwide elections from 18 to 16

A young individual at a polling booth (photo: DW)
A young individual at a polling booth (photo: DW) DW

Germany's constitution, the Basic Law, is clear: "Anyone who has reached the age of 18 is entitled to vote," it states.

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Many young people are not satisfied with this. Why not be able to vote in all elections, including federal elections, at the age of 16? The three parties in Germany's coalition government — the center-left Social Democrats (SPD), neoliberal Free Democrats (FDP) and environmentalist Greens — support this proposal. Germany's Child Protection Association and the German Children's Fund have an even more radical suggestion: They want the voting age lowered to 14.

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Student Raye Linjonom Nisayatou told DW that that would be too young. "But, to be allowed to participate in federal elections at 16, I think that is pretty cool," the 16-year-old from Berlin said.

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Miro Lim is more skeptical. The 17-year-old high school student was eligible to vote for the first time in February, but then only at the municipal level — choosing the members of the local administration in his district of Berlin. "That was manageable, and I can imagine what changes are possible in the place where I live," he said. "With federal elections, everything is much more complicated." Aside from this, he finds the legislative period between federal elections to be a very long time. "My opinion could have changed long ago."

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The majority opposes voting at 16

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With his rather dismissive attitude, Miro Lim is in line with the current trend. According to a recent survey conducted by pollsters INSA, 62% of respondents rejected or "rather rejected" the idea that citizens aged over 16 should be allowed to vote in Bundestag elections. However, in a similar survey from 7 years ago, 80% of respondents expressed reservations about the idea.

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Sigrid Meinhold-Henschel from the German foundation Bertelsmann Stiftung cannot understand the skepticism. To her, lowering the voting age is a good remedy against disenchantment with politics. "Various studies prove that 16-year-olds are no different from 18-year-olds when it comes to their political knowledge and interest," she told DW. "In this respect, there is no plausible justification for not lowering the voting age. Engaging early with political parties and elections is good. It keeps our democracy alive and makes it sustainable."

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What do the politicians think?

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Among political parties, the battle lines on this issue are clearly drawn. The three coalition partners, SPD, FDP, and Greens, support lowering the voting age for federal elections, as does the socialist Left Party.

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The center-right Christian Democratic Union (CDU) and Christian Social Union (CSU), which are particularly strong among older voters, as well as the far-right populist Alternative for Germany (AfD) party, oppose the reform.

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Experts conclude that by lowering the age of eligibility, about 1.5 million more people will be allowed to enter the voting booths.

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Changing the constitution requires the approval of two-thirds of the members of the Bundestag federal parliament and the Bundesrat upper house of parliament, which represents Germany's 16 federal states at the national level. The parties in the governing coalition do not have enough votes to do this — they would need support from the opposition.

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Someone who has been campaigning to lower the voting age to 16 for almost two decades is Johannes Vogel. The 41-year-old used to lead the youth wing of the FDP and is now the party's deputy chairman.

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Intergenerational fairness in an era of an aging population is an argument in favor of an earlier voting age, Vogel told DW. "Of course, it would be good if the perspectives of future generations were incorporated more strongly into politics," he said.

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The conservative opposition counters this. Many 16-year-olds do not yet know which career they will choose or what they want to study. They are not allowed to buy strong alcoholic drinks or be in nightclubs after midnight. Parents could strongly influence their voting decisions.

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It is obviously contradictory "if on one hand young people are only allowed to sign contracts and be held liable according to civil law once they turn 18, but on the other hand the voting age is lowered," Ansgar Heveling, legal advisor to the CDU/CSU parliamentary group in the Bundestag told DW.

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A hodgepodge of voting rights

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In Europe, 16- and 17-year-olds are only allowed to vote in nationwide parliamentary elections in Malta, Greece, and Austria. Worldwide, only a few countries permit these teenagers at the polling booths.

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In Germany, 6 of the 16 federal states already allow 16-year-olds to vote in state-wide elections and 11 states allow them to vote in local elections.

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At the upcoming European Parliament elections in June 2024, 16-year-old Germans will be eligible to vote for the first time. The governing parties (SPD, FDP, Greens) brought this law change about using their parliamentary majority in November 2022. They did not need to amend the constitution to do this, therefore did not require a two-thirds majority.

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The political scientist Sigrid Meinhold-Henschel disapproves of all the differing rules: "We have a patchwork of laws when it comes to accessing the ballot box. So, we then must explain to a young person that they are eligible to vote in European Union elections, but not in German federal elections."

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Student Raye Linjonom Nisayatou from Berlin agrees: "I find that quite confusing," she told DW.

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It remains unclear whether the voting age will really be lowered to 16. Despite this uncertainty, FDP politician and longtime campaigner Johannes Vogel remains optimistic: "I hope it happens, sooner rather than later."

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This article was originally written in German.

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