Political party in Germany
The Party of Bible-abiding Christians (German : Partei Bibeltreuer Christen , PBC) was a conservative evangelical minor right-wing political party in Germany . It was founded in 1989 during a convent of the Federation of Pentecostal Churches to serve as political arm of the Christian right in Germany. It was against same-sex marriage and legality of abortion . It supported a reference to God in the European Constitution and it strongly supported Israel . In March 2015, the PBC merged with the Party for Labour, Environment and Family (AUF) into the Alliance C – Christians for Germany .
Most members were from Württemberg or Saxony and were members or sympathizers of what Germans call "Freikirche" (Free Church ), i.e., Protestants from Pentecostal and Charismatic sects, which are not affiliated with the large Lutheran Protestant Church in Germany .
The party's success, however, was very limited on the federal and state levels of government because it never reached the "5% hurdle" of votes cast necessary to get into the parliaments in Germany's system of proportional representation . In the last federal election the PBC participated (2013), the party achieved 0.0 percent of votes.[ 1]
By contrast, the conservative Christian Democratic Union and Christian Social Union in Bavaria are powerful political forces in Germany (based on the number of votes and offices held). They differ greatly from the former PBC though in accepting secularization and being traditionally close to the Protestant Church in Germany and the Roman Catholic Church .
The party was a member of the European Christian Political Movement (EPCM).
Election results
Federal Parliament (Bundestag )
Election
Constituency
Party list
Seats
Status
Votes
%
+/-
Votes
%
+/-
1994
65,651 (#12)
0.14
New
26,864 (#11)
0.06
New
Extra-parliamentary
1998
71,941 (#15)
0.15
0.01
46,379 (#11)
0.09
0.03
Extra-parliamentary
2002
101,645 (#12)
0.21
0.06
71,106 (#10)
0.15
0.06
Extra-parliamentary
2005
108,605 (#12)
0.23
0.02
57,027 (#9)
0.12
0.03
Extra-parliamentary
2009
40,370 (#17)
0.09
0.14
12,052 (#17)
0.03
0.09
Extra-parliamentary
2013
18,542 (#21)
0.04
0.05
2,081 (#24)
0.00
0.03
Extra-parliamentary
References
^ "Übersicht" . Archived from the original on 2015-02-06. Retrieved 2018-03-13 . (Official election results in Germany are rounded to one digit behind the decimal point, which results in parties with less than 0.05 of votes being listed with an official result of 0.0 percent.)
Represented in the Bundestag (733 seats) Represented in theEuropean Parliament (96 seats for Germany)
Represented in the 16 state parliaments (1,893 seats)
Minor parties (without representation at the state level or above) Notes:
CDU : does not participate in state elections in Bavaria ; instead, an associated party CSU participates here.
AfD : is currently not in the state parliaments of Bremen and Schleswig-Holstein .
The Greens : are currently not in the state parliaments of Brandenburg , Saarland and Thuringia .
FDP : is currently not in state parliaments of Bavaria , Berlin , Brandenburg, Lower Saxony , Saarland, Saxony and Thuringia.
The Left : is currently not in the state parliaments of Baden-Württemberg , Bavaria, Brandenburg, Hesse , Lower Saxony, North Rhine-Westphalia , Rhineland-Palatinate , Saarland and Schleswig-Holstein.
BSW : is currently only in the state parliaments of Berlin, Brandenburg, Hamburg , Rhineland-Palatinate, Saxony, and Thuringia.
Free Voters (FW) : is currently only in the state parliaments of Bavaria, Rhineland-Palatinate and Saxony.
International National Other