Alfred Neumann (East German politician) explained

Alfred Neumann
Office:First Deputy Chairman of the
Council of Ministers
1Blankname:Chairman
Term Start:26 June 1968
Term End:7 November 1989
Successor:Position abolished
Office1:Minister for Materials Management
Term Start1:22 December 1965
Term End1:26 June 1968
Predecessor1:Position established
Successor1:Erich Haase
Office2:Chairman of the
National Economy Council
1Blankname2:Chairman of the
Council of Ministers
Term Start2:6 July 1961
Term End2:22 December 1965
Predecessor3:Position established
Successor3:Position abolished
Office4:Secretary for Cadre Affairs of the
Central Committee Secretariat of the Socialist Unity Party
Term Start4:3 February 1958
Term End4:4 July 1961
Predecessor4:Karl Schirdewan
Successor4:Erich Honecker
Office5:First Secretary of the
Socialist Unity Party in Berlin
Term Start5:1953
Term End5:1957
Predecessor5:Hans Jendretzky
Successor5:Hans Kiefert
Embed:yes
Office6:Member of the Volkskammer
for Berlin-Treptow, Berlin-Köpenick
Term Start6:8 November 1950
Term End6:16 November 1989
Predecessor6:multi-member district
Successor6:Richard Schimko
Birth Date:15 December 1909
Death Place:Berlin, Germany
Party:Socialist Unity Party
Module2:----

Alfred "Ali" Neumann (15 December 1909 – 8 January 2001) was an East German politician. He was a member of the Politburo of the Central Committee of the Socialist Unity Party of Germany, and for a short time, he was East German Minister of Materials Management.

Life

Neumann was born in Berlin-Schöneberg and completed training as a joiner. In 1919, he joined the worker's sport club "Fichte" ("Fir" or "Spruce"), which in 1928 became a member of the "Fighting Community for Red Sport Unity" ("Kampfgemeinschaft für Rote Sporteinheit"; KG). Neumann became a member of the Communist Party of Germany (KPD) in 1929, and in 1930, a member of the KG state leadership.

Second World War

In 1933-1934 he worked together with Karl Maron illegally – for Hitler had come to power by now – for the KG. In 1934, he emigrated through Sweden and Finland to the USSR, where he worked as a sport teacher. In 1938, he was expelled from the Soviet Union as he had no Soviet citizenship, and he went to Spain where he participated in the Spanish Civil War as a member of the International Brigades. In 1939, he was arrested in France and interned, in 1941, he was handed over to the Gestapo, and in 1942 he was sentenced by the Volksgerichtshof to eight years at hard labour in a Zuchthaus for high treason. In February 1945, he was transferred from Brandenburg-Görden Prison to the Dirlewanger SS penal battalion, from which he succeeded in escaping. He became a Soviet prisoner of war, however, and stayed until 1947 in several prison camps.

East Germany

After his return to Germany, he joined the Socialist Unity Party ("Sozialistische Einheitspartei Deutschlands"; SED) and was an administrative staffer and an SED functionary at the district level in Berlin. In 1949, he became Secretary for Propaganda for the SED Berlin state leadership, from 1951 to 1953, he was East Berlin's acting mayor, and from 1953 to 1957, succeeding Hans Jendretzky, he was First Secretary of the Berlin SED district leadership.

From 1949, Neumann was a representative in the Volkskammer, from 1954 a member of the Central Committee and candidate, and from February 1958 a member of the SED Central Committee's Politburo. From 1957 to 1961, he was SED Central Committee Secretary, from 1961 to 1965 chairman of the People's Economic Council (Volkswirtschaftsrat), and from 1965 to 1968 Minister of Materials Management. From 1962, he was a member of the Presidium of the Council of Ministers, and in 1968 he was one of the first two acting chairmen of the Council of Ministers.

Neumann played an important role in the initiation and implementation of the New Economic System ("Neues Ökonomisches System"; NÖS). In the wake of Erich Honecker's removal of Walter Ulbricht in 1971, Neumann, as the only important Politburo member from that time, refused to go along with underwriting a secret request to the Soviet leadership for Ulbricht's redemption, since he was on Ulbricht's side on content and conceptual issues. Erich Honecker would never forget this. Neumann was until the end an uncomfortable antagonist to Honecker, but this was never used in public against him.

Downfall

In 1989, in East Germany's dying days, Neumann went back to join the Council of Ministers and was excluded from the Politburo. He was also excluded from the SED/PDS in 1990. From 1992 he faced accusations of "manslaughter and bodily harm on the inter-German border" for his membership in the East German National Defence Council ("Nationaler Verteidigungsrat der DDR"). The 23rd Penal Chamber of the Berlin State Court, however, stayed proceedings in 1999 without ever arranging a trial.

Neumann received in 1956 and 1964 the Fatherland Order of Merit and in 1984 the Order of Karl Marx.

Literature