Diether Dehm | |
Honorific-Suffix: | MdB a.D. |
Office: | Member of the Bundestag for Lower Saxony |
Term Start1: | 16 August 1994 |
Term End1: | 10 November 1994 |
Predecessor1: | Barbara Weiler |
Successor1: | multi-member district |
Term Start: | 17 October 2005 |
Term End: | 26 October 2021 |
Predecessor: | multi-member district |
Successor: | Victor Perli |
Birth Name: | Jörg-Diether Wilhelm Dehm-Desoi |
Birth Date: | 1950 4, df=y |
Nationality: | German |
Party: | The Left |
Alma Mater: | Goethe University Frankfurt |
Diether Dehm (full name Jörg-Diether Wilhelm Dehm-Desoi;[1] born 3 April 1950) is a German singer-songwriter, music producer and left-wing politician. He was a member of the Social Democratic Party of Germany, the PDS, and the Left Party.
Dehm was born in Frankfurt on 3 April 1950.[2] His father Otto Dehm was a mechanic, and played football for FSV Frankfurt, and his mother Inge (née Schulz) was a clerk.[3] He studied remedial education, graduating in 1972,[3] and receiving a doctorate in 1975.[4]
Dehm performed as a singer-songwriter in the 1960s under the pseudonym Lerryn, a portmanteau of his nickname, Larry, and Lenin.[4] He won an award at the , a seminal arts festival held in 1968.[5] In 1971, he founded German: Lieder im Park ('Songs in the Park'), a summer festival showcasing singer-songwriters, and organised German: Rock gegen rechts ('Rock Against the Right Wing') events.[6]
Dehm produced, wrote and played on Dutch folk rock band Bots's album German: Aufstehn ('Stand Up').[7] Included on the album is German: "Sieben Tage lang", the German version of Bots's best-known song, Dutch; Flemish: "Zeven Dagen Lang" ('Seven Days Long'); the translation was done by Dehm and Günter Wallraff.[8] Dehm, using the pseudonym N. Heirell, collaborated with Klaus Lage to write the song ('1000 and 1 Night'),[9] which reached number five on the German singles charts in September 1984.[10]
In 1988, Dehm wrote a new party anthem for the SPD, titled German: "Das weiche Wasser bricht den Stein".[11] [12]
In the 1990s, Dehm wrote the screenplay for the musical film German: [[Die Eisprinzessin]], starring Katharina Witt;[13] [14] Dehm had been Witt's manager for a time.[15]
In 1970–1971, Dehm was recruited by the East German Stasi secret service, and both he and his wife Christa Desoi became unofficial collaborators (IMs). Dehm used the codename Willy. His most notable work for the Stasi came in 1976, after dissident East German songwriter Wolf Biermann was exiled while in West Germany. Dehm became Biermann's manager, and reported on Biermann's activities.[4] According to Stasi files, Dehm also reported on, among other subjects, activities of the SPD and certain West German artists, and goings-on at the University of Frankfurt.[16] In 1996, a court ruled that it was legal to refer to Dehm as a Stasi informer.[4]
Dehm was a member of the SPD from 1966 to 1998, serving as a member of the Bundestag for a short time in 1994.[2] He became a member of the PDS in 1998, and was elected one of its deputy chairs in 1999.[17] He won re-election to that position twice,[16] but lost when he ran for a fourth term in 2003.[18]
From 2004 to 2010, Dehm was state chairman for Lower Saxony in the Left Party.[16] He has been a Left Party member of the Bundestag since 2005.[2] Since 2010, he has chaired the German: Bundesarbeitsgemeinschaft Linke Unternehmerinnen und Unternehmer, a Left Party group representing entrepreneurs,[19] and has advocated on behalf of businesspeople.[16]
In 2016, it was revealed that Dehm had hired former Red Army Faction terrorist Christian Klar to perform work on his website. His employment of Klar was disclosed when Dehm attempted to obtain clearance for him to work inside the Bundestag building.[20] [21]