Andreas Voßkuhle | |
Office: | President of the Federal Constitutional Court of Germany |
Term Start: | 16 March 2010 |
Term End: | 22 June 2020 |
Nominator1: | SPD |
Appointer1: | Bundestag |
Predecessor1: | Hans-Jürgen Papier |
Successor1: | Stephan Harbarth |
Office2: | Vice-President of the Federal Constitutional Court of Germany |
Term Start2: | 7 May 2008 |
Term End2: | 16 March 2010 |
Nominator3: | SPD |
Appointer3: | Bundesrat |
Predecessor3: | Winfried Hassemer |
Successor3: | Ferdinand Kirchhof |
Office4: | Judge of the Federal Constitutional Court of Germany for the Second Senate |
Term Start4: | 7 May 2008 |
Term End4: | 22 June 2020 |
Nominator4: | SPD |
Appointer4: | Bundesrat |
Predecessor4: | Winfried Hassemer |
Successor4: | Astrid Wallrabenstein |
Birth Date: | 21 December 1963 |
Nationality: | German |
Spouse: | Eva Voßkuhle |
Alma Mater: | Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich |
Andreas Voßkuhle (born 21 December 1963) is a German legal scholar who served as the president of the Federal Constitutional Court of Germany from 2010 until 2020.
Voßkuhle was born and grew up in the small Western German city of Detmold, where his father was a lawyer specializing in administrative law.[1] Baptized into Lippische Landeskirche, one of Germany's few Reformed member churches. He started studying law at the Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich and the University of Bayreuth between 1983 and 1989. In 1989 he passed the first Staatsexamen. Before he completed the second Staatsexamen in 1993 he wrote his doctoral thesis (German title German: Rechtsschutz gegen den Richter [Legal protection against the judge]) under supervision of Peter Lerche.
Between 1992 and 1994, Voßkuhle was a research fellow at the chair for public law in Augsburg. Later, in 1995, he worked as a referent in the Ministry of the Interior of the Free State of Bavaria. Following his habilitation at the University of Augsburg in 1998, he became a full professor at the University of Freiburg in 1999 as well as the head of their institute for political science and the philosophy of law. Additionally, he held various positions including faculty director of the law faculty.
Since 2007 he is also an ordinary member of the Berlin-Brandenburg Academy of Sciences and Humanities. Later, in July 2007, he became the head of the University of Freiburg as well. He started to work in this position in April 2008.
In May 2008, Voßkuhle became the vice-president of the Federal Constitutional Court of Germany and the chairman of its second senate. He was the second choice of the SPD, after their initial candidate, Horst Dreier, was rejected by the CDU because of his position regarding stem cell research and torture.[2] When the mandate of the former President of the Court, Hans-Jürgen Papier ended in 2010, Voßkuhle became the youngest President in the history of the Federal Constitutional Court of Germany.
In February 2012, Chancellor Angela Merkel offered Voßkuhle the opportunity to succeed Christian Wulff as President of Germany, after the president's resignation. He later declined the offer.[1]
The term of office of a judge on the Federal Constitutional Court is 12 years and cannot be extended. Therefore, his term ended in June 2020.[3] [4]
Since 2022, following an appointment by Chancellor Olaf Scholz, Voßkuhle has been serving on a three-member panel (alongside Norbert Lammert and Krista Sager) to assess potential conflicts of interest, requiring senior German officials from the chancellor to deputy ministers to observe a cooling-off period if they want to quit the government for a job in business.[5]
After Norbert Lammert, the President of the Bundestag, criticized the court's 2009 ruling on the Treaty of Lisbon, Voßkuhle wrote in an essay for the daily newspaper Süddeutsche Zeitung that Lammert's statements were "strong words for a non-lawyer" and hardly served to "foster a culture of respect." Lammert eventually came around and upon "second reading" declared the court's ruling "a brilliant legal concept."[1]
He is married. His wife is Eva Voßkuhle. They do not have any children.[6]