In Germany, the district council (German: Kreistag) is the municipal at the district level (Kreise).
The establishment of district councils is regulated in detail in the local government law of the federal states in fulfillment of the legislative mandate under Article 28, Paragraph 1, Sentence 2 of the Basic Law. District councils are neither parliaments nor legislative bodies . Rather, as bodies of local self-government, they belong to the executive branch (like city and municipal councils).
According to all municipal codes (Gemeindeordnung) in Germany, the district council is always the principal body of the district. It decides on all fundamental matters of the district and can establish principles for the administration of the district ( authority for policymaking ). The district administrator manages day-to-day business and implements the decisions of the district council.
The district council's decision-making powers are limited to its own and delegated responsibilities. Unless all state responsibilities are also transferred to the district ( full municipalization ), the district council cannot decide on the work of the state-run department of the district administration or district office.
The district council is generally composed of members elected by the district's citizens (including EU citizens) in general, free, direct, equal, and secret elections . The electoral term lasts five years in most states, and six years in Bavaria.
In some states, in addition to the volunteer members, the district council also includes the full-time chief administrative officer of the district (Landrat). The former dual leadership of the full-time senior district administrator and the then honorary district administrator, as required by the North German council constitution, has since been abolished in the latter two states (North Rhine-Westphalia: 1994, Lower Saxony: 1996).
In some states, the district council is chaired by the district administrator; in other states, a separate chairman of the district council, district council president or is elected from among the (other) members.
The (other) members of the district council are sometimes referred to as members of the district council, honorary members of the district council, district council members, district councillors, or district council deputies. The term "district council deputies" is misleading in that, unlike members of the Bundestag and state parliaments, the members of the district councils are not parliamentarians and do not enjoy political immunity.
The country-specific differences in the composition and chairmanship of the district council are shown in the table below:
The district council establishes the District Committee as the most important committee under most state regulations, the Audit Committee as well as the Youth Welfare Committee under federal law. It may establish additional committees for specific areas of responsibility to prepare its resolutions or to make final decisions.
In the three special municipal associations, the equivalents to the district council each have their own names. In the Hanover region, the name is Regionsversammlung (Regional Assembly), in the Aachen city region, it is Städteregionstag (City Region Council), and in the Saarbrücken regional association, it is Regionalversammlung (Regional Assembly).