Abstract

The article outlines the recent development of the petitioning system in Germany and discusses the most important private and state platforms for public, digitally signable petitions . Connecting private platforms with the parliamentary petitioning system, which is sometimes demanded, would be counterproductive . The observable possibilities of influencing the course of petitions as well as the economic connections between the various private campaign and petitioning platforms speak against this . Instead, a plea is made for an upgrading of the parliamentary petitioning system . Two concrete measures appear promising here: the introduction of a petitioning hour in the plenary session of the German Bundestag and the establishment of public petitions that can be digitally signed in all federal states . Processes of fragmentation, economization, and devaluation of parliamentarism can thus be countered .

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