Citizens' assembly on public broadcasting

On June 18, 2026, the Brandenburg State Parliament, at the request of State Parliament President Ulrike Liedtke (SPD), resolved to establish a Citizens’ Assembly to reform public broadcasting. 

The mini-public will consist of 51 members. Participants will be randomly selected from municipal resident registration records. A participation service provider will be commissioned to conduct the random selection process and manage the Citizens’ Assembly itself.

Topics

The Citizens’ Assembly is to address the following topics:

  • Stronger regional roots and visibility for Brandenburg in the programming of Rundfunk Berlin-Brandenburg, as well as the importance of regional reporting for democratic opinion-forming;
  • Focusing programming on the core missions of information, education, and culture, as well as their contemporary presentation in linear programming and digital offerings;
  • The role of public broadcasting in promoting media diversity, journalistic quality, digitization, and the support of local journalism.

Citizens’ Assembly develops recommendations

On this basis, the Citizens’ Assembly will develop concrete recommendations regarding the structure, mandate, participation, and oversight of public broadcasting and will submit a citizens’ report to the Brandenburg State Parliament.

Assembly members will receive a flat-rate allowance of 100 euros per day of in-person sessions and 50 euros if the session takes place online. In addition, a new project office at the state legislature will provide organizational support for the assembly’s work. Nine months after the Citizens’ Assembly begins, it is expected to have drafted a citizens’ report and submitted it to the state legislature.

The work of the mini-public will be accompanied by academic experts. This support serves to evaluate and document the deliberations, as well as to provide technical assistance for the process.

“Democracy’s Repair Shops”

Citizens’ assemblies are “democracy’s repair shops,” said State Parliament President Liedtke during the debate on the resolution to establish one. They provide a space where different opinions can come together. “A Citizens’ Assembly does not replace us as a parliament; it complements us for a short time.”

The musicologist from Neuruppin had been advocating for the establishment of a mini-public for quite some time, citing similar bodies in places such as Baden-Württemberg, Thuringia, and the Saarland. According to Liedtke, such institutions also exist time and again at the local level.

‘Great interest’ at RBB

Ulrike Demmer, Director-General of Rundfunk Berlin-Brandenburg (RBB), has expressed her openness to engaging with the planned mini-public in Brandenburg on the future of public service broadcasting.

“We are following the plans for such a Citizens’ Assembly with great interest and are pleased that the state parliament is making RBB a topic of discussion there,” Demmer told the German Press Agency. “We cannot prejudge the work, but should there be interest: we would be happy to invite the participants of the Citizens’ Assembly to come and see for themselves and engage in direct dialogue with us,” said Demmer.

Coalition agreement between SPD and CDU

In their coalition agreement published on 4 March 2026, the SPD and CDU in the German state of Brandenburg agreed to hold a Citizens' Assembly on the reform of public service broadcasting. The mini-public is to be based at the state parliament and accompany the ‘necessary reform process’. The task of the mini-public is to draw up recommendations on the future of public service broadcasting, for example regarding transparency, efficiency and regional roots.

The coalition agreement states the following on this topic: "Public service broadcasting will be further reformed, made more efficient and given a clearer mandate. Contributions should remain stable and transparent. Local and regional private media are also important for independent information and opinion-forming."

Goals of the coalition

In order to strengthen media diversity and regional reporting, the following is needed

  • Further structural, administrative and technical reforms, more cooperation and fewer duplicate structures in public broadcasting
  • Focus on the core tasks of information, education and culture
  • More Brandenburg in rbb
  • Digitalisation, compliance with journalistic standards and the promotion of local journalism through a strengthened Berlin-Brandenburg Media Authority

In 2025, an initiative by State Parliament President Ulrike Liedtke (SPD) to hold a state-wide Citizens' Assembly on the topic of voluntary work failed due to resistance from the ranks of the BSW. Critics of mini-publics in the BSW were unfamiliar with the state parliament president's concept and found it unconvincing.

Citizens' Forum in Baden-Württemberg

The Citizens' Assembly planned in Brandenburg would not be the first on a media topic. In 2025, the Citizens' Forum ‘About media. About understanding. About us’ in Baden-Württemberg dealt with the future of the media landscape. Among other things, it called for transparency in the handling of licence fees. It also called for the creation of a European media library.

Public service broadcasting should be classified as ‘critical infrastructure’. In crises or extreme cases (e.g. war, disasters or large-scale failures of digital systems), the population must be able to obtain reliable, comprehensive and independent information.

The Citizens' Forum recommends that civil society set up a nationwide, independent organisation to document the unfair influence of political authorities on the media. Federal policy should promote such an organisation.

Manifesto for reform

In April 2024, employees of ARD, ZDF and Deutschlandradio published a manifesto for reforming public broadcasting. Among other things, they propose that its supervisory bodies be staffed by citizens selected at random.

‘The new public broadcasting system belongs to the licence fee payers. It therefore goes without saying that they should be involved in the supervisory bodies,’ the manifesto states. The representative composition of the supervisory bodies could be modelled on the composition of citizens' councils, for example. Direct elections, rotation or random selection are possible ways of ensuring that society is represented.

Principles of the programming mandate in danger

In general, employees see the principles and programming mandate as being in danger. They praise the principle of licence fee-funded public broadcasting as an essential pillar of democracy and culture, but call for ‘public broadcasting that takes its audience seriously, allows debate and reflects a broad spectrum of opinion without defamation’.

ARD, ZDF and Deutschlandradio must ‘return to focusing more strongly on the values and principles laid down in the State Media Treaty and act in accordance with them’. Transparency and the greatest possible citizen participation should be at the centre of this. Only in this way can "public service broadcasting regain acceptance and fulfil its purpose in democratic discourse.

Participation of licence fee payers

The signatories call for a ‘return to programme content that complies with the principles laid down in the State Media Treaty, such as diversity of opinion, plurality and balance’; the participation of licence fee payers in media policy, financial and personnel decisions‘ and ’a participation process that involves all relevant associations and initiatives campaigning for change in public service media".

Image licence: CC BY-NC-SA 2.0

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