You can help expand this article with text translated from the corresponding article in German. (December 2021)Click [show] for important translation instructions.
|
Marlies Deneke | |
---|---|
Born | Marlies Kilian 23 December 1953 |
Occupation | politician |
Political party | SED (1979-1989) PDS (1989-2002) |
Spouse(s) | 1. _____ Deneke 2. Dietmar Keller |
Children | y |
Marlies Deneke (born Marlies Kilian: 23 December 1953) is a German politician (SED / PDS). [1]
She sat as a member of the East German national parliament (Volkskammer) between March and October 1990, and then of the post-reunification Bundestag. [1] During and after the final months of the German Democratic Republic she was a member of the party leadership team trying to navigate the transformation of the Socialist Unity Party (Sozialistische Einheitspartei Deutschlands/ SED) from a position of dominance in the East German one-party state to its new role as the Party of Democratic Socialism (Partei des Demokratischen Sozialismus / PDS), an alternative left wing grouping operating in the multi-party context of a newly reunified Germany. [2]
Marlies Kilian was born into a working-class family in Magdeburg. She attended secondary school between 1960 and 1970, like most contemporaries becoming a member, in 1967, of the Free German Youth (Freie Deutsche Jugend / FDJ) organisation, which was in effect the youth wing of the ruling SED (party). [1] She joined the Trades Union Federation (Freier Deutscher Gewerkschaftsbund / FDGB) in 1970, undertaking an apprenticeship in merchandising between 1970 and 1972. [1] She then took a job locally with the East German Trade Organisation (Handelsorganisation) which was concerned with the provision of daily necessities in Magdeburg. She was promoted to the position of "Deputy Operations Director" ("stellvertretende Betriebsdirektorin") in 1977. [1] In 1979 she became a member of the ruling SED. [1]
In 1980 she embarked on a distance learning degree course with the Dresden Academy for Economics, which led in 1985 to a qualification in economics. [1] Between 1982 and 1988 she served as chair of the Trades Union leadership, and from 1988 till 1989 as SED Party Secretary within the "Handelsorganisation" in Magdeburg where she worked. [1] [3]
On 9 December 1989 Marlies Deneke was elected to the executive committee and the presidium of the newly launched Party of Democratic Socialism. [4] Between January and March 1990 she participated in the Round Table forum in Berlin. In June 1990 Deneke and André Brie were elected as the deputy chairpersons of the PDS. [5]
The first (and, as matters turned out, last) democratically configured general election in the German Democratic Republic took place on 18 March 1990. The PDS won only 66 of the 400 seats in the new "Volkskammer", but Deneke's name was nevertheless high enough up on the party list to ensure her inclusion. [6] She was also one of the 24 PDS members who transferred across to the new Bundestag in October 1990 under the terms of the unification treaty concluded the previous month. However, she was no longer a member after the election in December 1990. She was re-elected to the PDS deputy chairmanship in January 1991 [7] retaining both the position and a high party profile till December 1991. [8] [9]
Marlies Deneke continued to undertake support work for the PDS group in the Bundestag for some time, but she resigned from the party in 2002. [1]
The National Front of the German Democratic Republic was officially an alliance of parties and mass organisations (1950–1990). In fact, only one party held power in the GDR, namely the communist SED. The National Front was an instrument to exercise control over the other parties and organisations. The precursor of the National Front was the Democratic Bloc.
Horst Sindermann was a Communist German politician and one of the leaders of East Germany. He became Chairman of the Council of Ministers in 1973, but in 1976 he became President of the Volkskammer, the only member of the Socialist Unity Party of Germany to hold the post.
Werner Krolikowski was a German politician and high-ranking party functionary of the Socialist Unity Party (SED).
Hans-Joachim "Jochen" Willerding is a former politician (SED) of the German Democratic Republic.
Ehrhart Neubert is a retired German Evangelical minister and theologian.
Ursula Fischer is a German former national politician (PDS).
Emmi Dölling was a Czechoslovak/German political activist (KPD/SED) and journalist.
Petra Bläss is a German politician. She served in the German parliament (Bundestag) between 1990 and 2002, and was a Bundestag vice-president between 1998 and 2002.
Angelika Barbe is a German biologist who became a politician.
Dagmar Enkelmann is a German politician of Die Linke party.
Bertram Wieczorek is a German physician and former politician (CDU).
Bernd Meier was a German politician (SED/PDS) and official of the FDJ. He served as first party secretary of the party leadership ("Bezirksleitung") for the Frankfurt (Oder) region and then as a member of the national parliament (Volkskammer) during the eventful run-up to reunification.
Christa Luft is a German economist and politician of the SED/PDS. Luft joined the SED in 1958. From 18 November 1989 to 18 March 1990, she was the Minister of Economics in the Modrow government. From 1994 to 2002 she was member of the Bundestag for the PDS.
Dietmar Keller was an East German politician (SED/PDS) who served as Minister for Culture in the Modrow government. After reunification he sat as a member of the German parliament ("Bundestag") between 1990 and 1994.
Maria Rentmeister was a German Women's and cultural policy maker - who became an anti-government resistance activist after 1933. She spent much of the time during the twelve Nazi years abroad or, later, in state detention. In 1945 she relocated to what now became the Soviet occupation zone where she became the first General Secretary of the politically important Democratic Women's League .
Heidi Knake-Werner is a German politician. She served as a member of the German parliament ("Bundestag") between 1994 and 2002. Between 2002 and 2009 she was one of Berlin's more high-profile senators.
Werner Jarowinsky was an East German economist who became a party official. Between 1963 and 1989 he was a member of the powerful Party Central Committee which, under the Leninist constitutional structure that the country had adopted after 1949, was the focus of political power and decision making. Within the Central Committee, from 1984 till 1989, he served as a member of Politburo which controlled and coordinated the work of the Central Committee on behalf of the leadership.
Gerhard Riege was a respected East German law professor.
Katrin Budde is a German politician of the Social Democratic Party (SPD), who has been serving as a member of the Bundestag from the state of Saxony-Anhalt since 2017.
Käte Niederkirchner was a German politician and pediatrician. In 1967 she became the youngest member of the East German parliament ("Volkskammer"). Her life was impacted by having been born with a famous aunt, the Communist resistance activist Käthe Niederkirchner who was killed by Nazi paramilitaries at Ravensbrück concentration camp in 1944, and who was posthumously much celebrated by East Germany's political leadership.
{{cite book}}
: |work=
ignored (help)