Marco Buschmann | |
Honorific-Suffix: | MdB |
Office: | Minister of Justice |
Chancellor: | Olaf Scholz |
Term Start: | 8 December 2021 |
Predecessor: | Christine Lambrecht |
Office1: | Chief Whip of the FDP in the Bundestag |
Leader1: | Christian Lindner |
Term Start1: | 2017 |
Term End1: | 2021 |
Successor1: | Johannes Vogel |
Office2: | Member of the Bundestag for North Rhine-Westphalia |
Term Start2: | 24 October 2017 |
Predecessor2: | Multi-member district |
Constituency2: | FDP List |
Term Start3: | 27 October 2009 |
Term End3: | 22 October 2013 |
Constituency3: | FDP List |
Successor3: | Multi-member district |
Predecessor3: | Multi-member district |
Birth Date: | 1977 8, df=yes |
Residence: | Gelsenkirchen |
Alma Mater: | University of Bonn University of Cologne (Dr. iur.) |
Website: |
Marco Buschmann (born 1 August 1977) is a German lawyer and politician of the Free Democratic Party (FDP) who has been serving as Federal Minister of Justice in Chancellor Olaf Scholz's cabinet since 2021. He has served as a member of the Bundestag from the state of North Rhine-Westphalia from 2009 to 2013 and again since 2017.[1] [2]
After graduating from the Max-Planck-Gymnasium in Gelsenkirchen in 1997, Buschmann studied law at the University of Bonn. In 2004, he passed his first state examination at the Düsseldorf Higher Regional Court. This was followed by a legal traineeship at the Regional Court in Essen and in 2007 the Second State Examination at the Higher Regional Court in Hamm.
From 2007 until 2009, Buschmann worked as a lawyer at the Düsseldorf office of international law firm White & Case. In his free time, he was also a SoundCloud artist under the pseudonym MBSounds.[3]
Buschmann has been a member of the FDP since 1994.
In the 2009 Bundestag elections, Buschmann ran for election in the constituency of Gelsenkirchen and entered the Bundestag via list number 20. In parliament, he served on the Committee on Legal Affairs. He was chairman of the working group on legal affairs in the FDP parliamentary group and an expert on constitutional and economic law. From 2013, he succeeded Christian Ahrendt as the group's spokesperson on legal affairs. Due to the failure of his party to reach the five percent hurdle in the 2013 Bundestag elections, he left the Bundestag.
The federal executive committee of the FDP appointed Buschmann as Federal Executive Director with effect from 1 June 2014. Following his election to the German Bundestag, his term as Federal Executive Director ended on 31 October 2017. Marco Mendorf was appointed as his successor.
In the 2017 federal elections, Buschmann stood for the FDP in the Gelsenkirchen constituency and was elected to the 19th German Bundestag via 4th place on the North Rhine-Westphalia state list of the FDP. In parliament, he was the chief whip of his parliamentary group, in this capacity supporting the group's chair Christian Lindner.[4] In addition, he was a member of the Council of Elders, which – among other duties – determines daily legislative agenda items and assigns committee chairpersons based on party representation; the Committee on Legal Affairs and Consumer Protection; and the Committee on the Scrutiny of Elections, Immunity and the Rules of Procedure. He was also an alternate member of the Committee on the Election of Judges (Wahlausschuss), which is in charge of appointing judges to the Federal Constitutional Court of Germany.
In the negotiations to form a so-called traffic light coalition of the Social Democratic Party (SPD), the Green Party and the FDP following the 2021 German elections, Buschmann was part of his party's delegation in the leadership group, alongside Christian Lindner, Volker Wissing and Bettina Stark-Watzinger.[5] Following the negotiations, the FDP entered the government as part of a coalition agreement, and Buschmann took office as Justice Minister in the Scholz cabinet.[6]
Early in his tenure, Buschmann presented a draft law that would do away with a Nazi-era law forbidding doctors from providing information about abortions.[7] Shortly after, he introduced legislation that would cut the red tape required for changing a person's name and gender, abolishing a controversial 1980 law regulating the process.[8]
In October 2023, Buschmann participated in the first joint cabinet retreat of the German and French governments in Hamburg, chaired by Scholz and President Emmanuel Macron.[9] [10]
According to research by the Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung in late July 2024 Buschmann ordered Public Prosecutor General Jens Rommel to release the convicted russian murderer Vadim Krasikov based upon §459a of the code of criminal procedure. Krasikov was to be part of a large prisoner exchange, apparently arranged by the turkish National Intelligence Organization, in which 10 people were sent to Russia, while 16 individuals were freed from russian prisons and transferred to western nations.[11]