Paul Verner Explained

Paul Verner
Office:First Secretary of the
Socialist Unity Party in Berlin
Term Start:February 1959
Term End:May 1971
Predecessor:Hans Kiefert
Successor:Konrad Naumann
Embed:yes
Office1:Member of the Volkskammer
for Zwickau-Stadt, Zwickau-Land
Term Start1:16 November 1958
Term End1:12 December 1986
Predecessor1:multi-member district
Successor1:Willy Hallbauer
Title2:Central Committee Secretariat responsibilities[1]
Suboffice3:State and Legal Affairs
Subterm3:1980-1983
Suboffice4:Financial Administration and Party Businesses
Subterm4:1971-1984
Suboffice5:Youth
Subterm5:1971-1983
Suboffice6:Woman
Subterm6:1971-1978
Suboffice7:Church Affairs
Subterm7:1958–1984
Suboffice8:Sport
Subterm8:1971-1983;
1958-1967
Suboffice9:Health Policy
Subterm9:1958–1967
Suboffice10:All-German Affairs
Subterm10:1950–1953
Party:Socialist Unity Party
Otherparty:Communist Party of Germany
Birth Date:26 April 1911
Death Place:East Berlin, East Germany
Module2:----

Paul Verner (26 April 1911  - 12 December 1986) was a German communist politician. He joined the communist movement at a young age and went into exile during Adolf Hitler's rule. Verner became a prominent political personality in the German Democratic Republic after the war.

Early life

Verner was born in Chemnitz in 1911. His father was a metal worker while his mother worked as a textile worker. Verner trained as metal worker like his father. At an early age, Verner joined the communist children's organization Jungspartakusbund (Young Spartacus League).

Political activism

In 1925 he joined the Young Communist League of Germany (KJVD). In 1929 he became a member of the Communist Party of Germany (KPD). He worked as a volunteer in the communist publishing house Kämpfer-Verlag in Chemnitz. He became a member of the regional leadership of KJVD in Saxony. In 1932 he became editor of Junge Garde ('Young Guard').

In exile

With the National Socialist takeover in Germany, Verner went into exile. Towards the end of 1933, he became a member of the Scandinavian Bureau of the Young Communist International, and edited Jugendinternationale (the German-language publication of the Young Communist International). In 1934 he shifted to Paris, where he became editor-in-chief of Junge Garde (now published in exile), a position he held until the spring of 1935. He moved to Belgium, as the KJVD reorganized.

Verner fought as a volunteer in the International Brigades in the Spanish Civil War. After the Spanish Civil War, he emigrated to Sweden.[2] He was detained by Swedish authorities in Smedsbo, Värmland, between March 1940 and 1942. After being released from Smedsbo he began working as a metal worker in Sweden from August 1943.

Political career in the GDR

After the end of the Second World War, he returned to Germany. During 1946 he was a co-founder, together with Hermann Axen and Erich Honecker, of the Free German Youth ("Freie Deutsche Jugend" / FDJ),[2]

In 1958 Verner became a candidate member of the Socialist Unity Party of Germany (SED) politburo. He was also one of the secretaries of the party Central Committee. In March 1959 Verner became First Secretary of the Berlin district organization of SED, a powerful institution in the GDR. At the time the party district included West Berlin. Verner received criticism for the dismal performance of the party in West Berlin. Under Verner's leadership the West Berlin organizations were separated from the SED in 1961 (and would become the Socialist Unity Party of West Berlin).[2]

Verner became a full Politburo member in 1963.[3] For most of the 1970s and early 1980s, he was the second-ranking member of the SED hierarchy, and de facto the second most powerful man in the country after party leader Erich Honecker.

He died in Berlin on 12 December 1986.[4]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Büro Paul Verner im ZK der SED . 19 November 2023. de.
  2. The Sed Leadership after the Sixth Party Congress (III)
  3. The Sed Leadership After the Sixth Party Congress
  4. Web site: Verner, Paul * 26.4.1911, † 12.12.1986 Mitglied des Politbüros des ZK der SED, 1. Sekretär der Bezirksleitung Berlin der SED. Wer war wer in der DDR?. Michael F. Scholz. Ch. Links Verlag, Berlin & Bundesstiftung zur Aufarbeitung der SED-Diktatur, Berlin. 6 July 2018.