Angela merkel biography pdf
Angela Merkel – her political career in pictures
Angela Merkel was born in Hamburg on 17 July Just a few weeks later, her father accepted a pastorate in the former GDR and the family moved to the eastern part of Germany, behind the Iron Curtain.
She obtained a doctorate in physics and joined the “Demokratischer Aufbruch” (i.e. Democratic Beginning) party during the peaceful revolution of . In , Angela Merkel was the first woman to be elected German chancellor, and the first former GDR citizen to take up this office.
The path to the chancellery
Government spokesperson in the GDR – during the peaceful revolution in the GDR, Angela Merkel joined the “Demokratischer Aufbruch” (DA, i.e.
Democratic Beginning) party in and became the deputy government spokesperson in the first and indeed last freely elected government of the GDR in The DA, and with it Merkel, joined the CDU in On the photograph, she is sitting between Federal Finance Minister Theo Waigel (right) and GDR Finance Minister Walter Romberg (left).
Minister in Helmut Kohl’s cabinet – in , Chancellor Helmut Kohl unexpectedly appointed Angela Merkel as minister for women and youth.
She had previously been elected to the Bundestag in her constituency of Stralsund-Rügen-Grimmen in the state of Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania – as she has been in every election since. The photograph was taken at the CDU national party conference in Düsseldorf in
She remained minister for women and youth until Here she can be seen in Bonn in , talking to children with leukaemia from Chernobyl.
Federal environment minister, or more properly the minister for the environment, nature conservation and nuclear safety, is the post to which Angela Merkel was appointed following the election victory of the CDU/CSU in The photograph shows her marking woodpecker trees in alongside Jochen Flasbarth, formerly the president of the Nature and Biodiversity Conservation Union (Nabu) and now state secretary at the Federal Environment Ministry
Angela Merkel became party chairperson of the CDU on 10 April Following the party’s debacle in the federal elections, which had resulted in a red-green federal government led by Chancellor Gerhard Schröder (SPD), she had already been made the CDU’s general secretary.