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Kurt Georg Kiesinger

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Kurt Georg Kiesinger
Kiesinger in 1967
Chancellor of West Germany[a]
In office
1 December 1966 – 22 October 1969
PresidentHeinrich Lübke
Gustav Heinemann
Vice ChancellorWilly Brandt
Preceded byLudwig Erhard
Succeeded byWilly Brandt
Leader of the Christian Democratic Union
In office
23 May 1967 – 5 October 1971
General SecretaryBruno Heck
Preceded byLudwig Erhard
Succeeded byRainer Barzel
Minister-President of Baden-Württemberg
In office
17 December 1958 – 1 December 1966
DeputyHermann Veit
Wolfgang Haußmann
Preceded byGebhard Müller
Succeeded byHans Filbinger
President of the Bundesrat
In office
1 November 1962 – 31 October 1963
First Vice PresidentHans Ehard
Preceded byHans Ehard
Succeeded byGeorg Diederichs
Leader of the CDU/CSU group in the Bundestag
Acting
In office
9 May 1973 – 17 May 1973
First DeputyRichard Stücklen
WhipsLeo Wagner
Rudolf Seiters
Wilhelm Rawe
Olaf Baron von Wrangel
Paul Mikat
Preceded byRainer Barzel
Succeeded byKarl Carstens
Parliamentary constituencies
Member of the Bundestag
for Baden-Württemberg
In office
14 December 1976 – 4 November 1980
Preceded bymulti-member district
Succeeded bymulti-member district
ConstituencyChristian Democratic Union List
In office
20 October 1969 – 14 December 1976
Preceded byAnton Hilbert
Succeeded byNorbert Nothhelfer
ConstituencyWaldshut
Member of the
Landtag of Baden-Württemberg
for Saulgau
In office
12 March 1961 – 9 December 1966
Preceded byChristian Rack
Succeeded byAnton Lutz
Member of the Bundestag
for Ravensburg – Bodensee
In office
7 September 1949 – 19 February 1959
Preceded byConstituency established
Succeeded byEduard Adorno
Personal details
Born
Kurt Georg Kiesinger

(1904-04-06)6 April 1904
Ebingen, Württemberg, German Empire
Died9 March 1988(1988-03-09) (aged 83)
Tübingen, Baden-Württemberg, West Germany
Political partyCDU (1946–1988)
Nazi Party (1933–1945)
Spouse
Marie-Luise Schneider
(m. 1932)
Children2
OccupationLawyer
Signature

Kurt Georg Kiesinger (German: [ˈkʊʁt ˈɡeːɔʁk ˈkiːzɪŋɐ]; 6 April 1904 – 9 March 1988) was a German politician who served as the chancellor of West Germany from 1 December 1966 to 21 October 1969. Before he became Chancellor he served as Minister-President of Baden-Württemberg from 1958 to 1966 and as President of the Federal Council from 1962 to 1963. He was Chairman of the Christian Democratic Union from 1967 to 1971.

Kiesinger gained his certificate as a lawyer in March 1933 and worked as a lawyer in Berlin's Kammergericht court from 1935 to 1940.[1] He had joined the Nazi Party in 1933, but remained a largely inactive member. To avoid conscription, in 1940 he was appointed to the broadcast policy department of the Foreign Office by Joachim von Ribbentrop, and became deputy head of the broadcasting and propaganda departments in 1942.[2] In 1946 he became a member of the Christian Democratic Union. He was elected to the Bundestag in 1949, and was a member of the Bundestag until 1958 and again from 1969 to 1980. He left federal politics for eight years (from 1958 to 1966) to serve as Minister-President of Baden-Württemberg, and subsequently became Chancellor by forming a grand coalition with Willy Brandt's Social Democratic Party.

Kiesinger was considered an outstanding orator and mediator, and was dubbed "Chief Silver Tongue". He was an author of poetry and various books, and founded the universities of Konstanz and Ulm as Minister-President of Baden-Württemberg. Kiesinger is also considered controversial, which is mainly due to his affiliation and work with the Nazis. The student movement in particular, but also other sections of the population, saw Kiesinger as a politician who stood for the inadequacy of Germans' coming to terms with the past.

Early life and Nazi activities

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Kurt Georg Kiesinger was born in Ebingen, Kingdom of Württemberg (now Albstadt, Baden-Württemberg). His father was a commercial clerk in companies engaged in the local textile industry. Kiesinger was baptized Catholic because his mother was Catholic, though his father was Protestant. His mother died six months after he was born. His maternal grandmother exerted a strong influence on Kiesinger and encouraged him, while his father was indifferent to his advancement. After a year, his father was remarried to a Karoline Victoria Pfaff. They had seven children, of whom Kiesinger's half-sister Maria died a year after she was born. Pfaff was also a Catholic. Kiesinger was therefore shaped by both denominations and later referred to himself gladly as a "Protestant Catholic". Politically, Kiesinger grew up in a liberal, democratically-minded milieu.

Kiesinger studied law in Berlin and worked as a then as lawyer in Berlin from 1935 to 1940. As a student, he joined the (non-couleur wearing) Roman Catholic corporations KStV Alamannia Tübingen and Askania-Burgundia Berlin. He became a member of the Nazi Party in February 1933, but remained a largely inactive member.[3] In 1940, he was called to arms but avoided mobilization by finding a job in the Foreign Office's broadcasting department, rising quickly to become deputy head of the department from 1943 to 1945 and the department's liaison with the Propaganda Ministry.[4] He worked under Joachim von Ribbentrop, who would later be condemned to death at Nuremberg. After the war, he was interned by the Americans for his connection to Ribbentrop and spent 18 months in the Ludwigsburg camp before being released as a case of mistaken identity.[5]

Franco-German journalist Beate Klarsfeld demonstrated Kiesinger's close connections to Ribbentrop and Joseph Goebbels, the head of Nazi Germany's Propaganda Ministry.[6] She also asserted that Kiesinger had been chiefly responsible for the contents of German international broadcasts which included anti-Semitic and war propaganda, and had collaborated closely with SS functionaries Gerhard Rühle [de] and Franz Alfred Six. The latter was responsible for mass murders in Nazi-occupied Eastern Europe and was tried as a war criminal in the Einsatzgruppen Trial at Nuremberg. Even after becoming aware of the extermination of the Jews, Kiesinger had continued to produce anti-Semitic propaganda.[7] These allegations were based in part on documents that Albert Norden published about the culprits of war and Nazi crimes.[8]

Early political career

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Kiesinger joined the Christian Democratic Union (CDU) in 1946. From 1946 he gave private lessons to law students, and in 1948 he resumed his practice as a lawyer. In 1947 he also became unpaid secretary-general of the CDU in Württemberg-Hohenzollern.

1961 election poster for Kiesinger

In the federal election in 1949 he was elected to the Bundestag, in which he went on to sit until 1958 and again from 1969 to 1980. In his first legislative term he represented the constituency of Ravensburg, in which he achieved record results of over 70 percent, from 1969 the constituency of Waldshut. For the 1976 federal election, Kiesinger renounced his own constituency and entered parliament via the Baden-Württemberg state list of his party. In the first two legislative periods (1949–1957) he was chairman of the mediation committee of the Bundestag and Bundesrat. On 19 October 1950, Kiesinger received 55 votes against his party friend Hermann Ehlers (201 votes) in the election for President of the Bundestag, although he had not been proposed. In 1951 he became a member of the CDU executive board. From December 17, 1954 to January 29, 1959, he was chairman of the Bundestag Committee on Foreign Affairs, to which he had been a member since 1949.

During that time, he became known for his rhetorical brilliance, as well as his in-depth knowledge of foreign affairs. However, despite the recognition he enjoyed within the Christian Democrat parliamentary faction, he was passed over during various cabinet reshuffles. Consequently, he decided to switch from federal to state politics.

Minister-President of Baden-Württemberg

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Kiesinger became Minister-President of the state of Baden-Württemberg on 17 December 1958, an office in which he served until 1 December 1966. At that time Kiesinger was also a member of the Landtag of Baden-Württemberg. As Minister-President he was President of the German Bundesrat from 1 November 1962 to 31 October 1963. During his time in office the state founded two universities, the University of Konstanz and the University of Ulm.

In the early days of the Federal Republic of Germany, oversized coalitions were not uncommon at the state level, and so Kiesinger led a coalition of the CDU, SPD, FDP/DVP and BHE until 1960, but then a CDU/CSU-FDP coalition, coalition from 1960 to 1966. On 15 April 1961, the BHE disbanded.

Chancellorship

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Kiesinger, Lyndon Johnson, Dean Rusk and Willy Brandt in 1967
Chancellor Kurt Kiesinger and US President Richard Nixon waving to the crowd in West Berlin in 1969
Portrait of Kurt Georg Kiesinger,
Kanzlergalerie Berlin

In 1966, following the collapse of the existing CDU/CSU-FDP coalition in the Bundestag, Kiesinger was elected to replace Ludwig Erhard as Federal Chancellor, heading a new CDU/CSU-SPD alliance with the SPD leader Willy Brandt as Vice Chancellor and Foreign Minister. The Kiesinger government remained in power for nearly three years. Kiesinger reduced tensions with the Soviet bloc nations, establishing diplomatic relations with Czechoslovakia, Romania, and Yugoslavia, but he opposed any major conciliatory moves. A number of progressive reforms were also realised during Kiesinger's time as Chancellor. Pension coverage was extended in 1967 via the abolition of the income-ceiling for compulsory membership. In education, student grants were introduced, together with a university building programme, while a constitutional reform of 1969 empowered the federal government to be involved with the Länder in educational planning through joint planning commission. Vocational training legislation was also introduced, while a reorganisation of unemployment insurance promoted retraining schemes, counselling and advice services, and job creation places. In addition, under the Lohnfortzahlunggesetz of 1969, employers had to pay all employees’ wages for the first six weeks of sickness.[9] In August 1969,[10] the Landabgaberente (a higher special pension for farmers willing to cede farms that were unprofitable according to certain criteria) was introduced.[11]

The historian Tony Judt has observed that Kiesinger's chancellorship, like the presidency of Heinrich Lübke, showed the "a glaring contradiction in the Bonn Republic's self-image" in view of their previous Nazi allegiances.[12] One of his low points as Chancellor was in 1968 when Nazi-hunter Beate Klarsfeld, who campaigned with her husband Serge Klarsfeld against Nazi criminals, publicly slapped him in the face during the 1968 Christian Democrat convention, while calling him a Nazi.[6] She did so in French and, whilst being dragged out of the room by two ushers, repeated her words in German, saying "Kiesinger! Nazi! Abtreten!" ("Kiesinger! Nazi! Step down!") Kiesinger, holding his left cheek, did not respond. Up to his death he refused to comment on the incident, and in other opportunities he denied explicitly that he had been opportunistic by joining the NSDAP in 1933 (although he admitted to joining the German Foreign Ministry to dodge his 1940 draft by the Wehrmacht). Other prominent critics included the writers Heinrich Böll and Günter Grass. (In 1966, Grass had written an open letter urging Kiesinger not to accept the chancellorship). In 2006, 40 years later, Grass, in an interview with the Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung, would confess to a Waffen-SS membership, which became a controversy on its own.[13]

After the election of 1969, the SPD preferred to form a coalition with the FDP, ending the uninterrupted post-war reign of the CDU chancellors. Kiesinger was succeeded as Chancellor by his former Vice-Chancellor Willy Brandt.

Later years and death

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Grave of Kurt Georg Kiesinger in Tübingen

Kiesinger continued to head the CDU/CSU in opposition and remained a member of the Bundestag until 1980. In July 1971 Kiesinger was succeeded as Leader of the Christian Democratic Union by Rainer Barzel. In 1972 he held the main speech for justification to the constructive vote of no confidence by the CDU/CSU parliamentary group against Willy Brandt in the Bundestag. The election of then CDU leader Rainer Barzel as chancellor was unsuccessful because of the bribery of Julius Steiner and probably Leo Wagner by GDR's Stasi.

In 1980 Kiesinger ended his career as politician and worked on his memoir. Of his planned memoirs, only the first part (Dark and Bright Years) was completed, covering the years up to 1958. It was released after his death in 1989. Kiesinger died in Tübingen on 9 March 1988, 28 days short of his 84th birthday. After a requiem mass in Stuttgart's St. Eberhard Church, his funeral procession was followed by protesters (mainly students) who wanted his former membership in the Nazi Party remembered.

Books

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  • Schwäbische Kindheit. (“Swabian childhood.”), Wunderlich Verlag, Tübingen 1964.
  • Ideen vom Ganzen. Reden und Betrachtungen. (“Ideas from the whole. Speeches and reflections.”), Wunderlich Verlag, Tübingen 1964.
  • Stationen 1949-1969. (“Stations 1949-1969.”), Wunderlich Verlag, Tübingen 1969.
  • Die Stellung des Parlamentariers in unserer Zeit. (“The position of the parliamentarian in our time.”), Stuttgart 1981.
  • Dunkle und helle Jahre: Erinnerungen 1904–1958. (“Dark and Bright Years: Memoirs 1904–1958.”), Deutsche Verlags-Anstalt, Stuttgart 1989.

References

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  1. ^ Braunbuch, chapter "Diplomaten Ribbentrops", 3rd Volume, Berlin, GDR 1968, https://web.archive.org/web/20101120003249/http://braunbuch.de/8-01.shtml
  2. ^ Klarsfeld, Beate (30 September 1967). "The truth about Kiesinger" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 4 April 2023. Retrieved 20 May 2024.
  3. ^ Kurt Georg Kiesinger
  4. ^ Jeffrey Herf, "Judenhass aus dem Äther. NS-Propaganda für die Arabische Welt während des Zweiten Weltkriegs", in Naziverbrechen. Täter, Taten, Bewältigungsversuche, edited by Martin Cüppers et al., Darmstadt 2013, pp. 45-61, here p. 49.
  5. ^ Munzinger-Online, s.v.Kurt Georg Kiesinger, Accessed 16 October 2010
  6. ^ a b "'Nazi hunter' Beate Klarsfeld to receive top German honor". Deutsche Welle. 14 May 2015.
  7. ^ Transcript of oral history interview Archived 28 December 2016 at the Wayback Machine, Kapitel aus: Beate Klarsfeld: Wherever they may be, 1972, Seite 26–35.
  8. ^ "Unwiderstehliche Kraft", Der Spiegel, 28 November 1966, no. 49, p. 31, 1966
  9. ^ Kolinsky, Eva (ed). The Federal Republic of Germany: The End of an Era.
  10. ^ Agricultural policy in Germany. Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development. 1 January 1974. ISBN 9789264112834.
  11. ^ Flora, Peter (1 January 1986). Growth to Limits: The Western European Welfare States Since World War II. Walter de Gruyter. ISBN 9783110111330.
  12. ^ Judt, Tony (2005). Postwar: A History of Europe Since 1945. New York: Penguin. p. 811. ISBN 9780143037750.
  13. ^ "Günter Grass enthüllt: "Ich war Mitglied der Waffen-SS"". FAZ.NET (in German). 11 August 2006. ISSN 0174-4909. Retrieved 15 October 2023.

Notes

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  1. ^ Due to the division of Germany, Kurt Georg Kiesinger was only the Federal Chancellor in West Germany. The term West Germany is only the common English name for the Federal Republic of Germany between its formation on 23 May 1949 and the German reunification through the accession of East Germany on 3 October 1990. The office of Chancellor did not exist in East Germany.

Further reading

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Bundestag
Bundestag established Member of the Bundestag
for RavensburgBodensee

1949–1959
Succeeded by
Preceded by Member of the Bundestag
for Waldshut

1969–1976
Succeeded by
Party-list proportional representation Member of the Bundestag
for Baden-Württemberg

1976–1980
Party-list proportional representation
Party political offices
Preceded by Leader of the Christian Democratic Union
1967–1971
Succeeded by
Preceded by Acting Bundestag Leader of the CDU/CSU Group
1973
Succeeded by
Political offices
Preceded by Minister–President of Baden-Württemberg
1958–1966
Succeeded by
Preceded by Chancellor of West Germany
1966–1969
Succeeded by