Thomas de Maizière explained

Thomas de Maizière
Honorific-Suffix:Bundesminister a. D.
Office:Minister of the Interior
Chancellor:Angela Merkel
Term Start:17 December 2013
Term End:14 March 2018
Predecessor:Hans-Peter Friedrich
Successor:Horst Seehofer
Chancellor1:Angela Merkel
Term Start1:28 October 2009
Term End1:3 March 2011
Predecessor1:Wolfgang Schäuble
Successor1:Hans-Peter Friedrich
Office2:Minister of Defence
Chancellor2:Angela Merkel
Term Start2:3 March 2011
Term End2:17 December 2013
Predecessor2:Karl-Theodor zu Guttenberg
Successor2:Ursula von der Leyen
Office3:Head of the Chancellery
Minister for Special Affairs
Chancellor3:Angela Merkel
Term Start3:22 November 2005
Term End3:27 October 2009
Successor3:Ronald Pofalla
Office5:Member of the Bundestag
for Meißen
Term Start5:27 October 2009
Term End5:26 October 2021
Predecessor5:Constituency established
Successor5:Barbara Lenk
Embed:yes
Office6:Member of the Landtag of Saxony
for Bautzen 1
Term Start6:19 October 2004
Term End6:21 November 2005
Predecessor6:Andreas Hahn
Successor6:Karl Mannsfeld
Office7:State Minister for the Interior of Saxony
1Namedata7:Georg Milbradt
Term Start7:11 November 2004
Term End7:22 November 2005
Predecessor7:Horst Rasch
Successor7:Albrecht Buttolo
Office8:State Minister of Justice of Saxony
1Namedata8:Georg Milbradt
Term Start8:2 May 2002
Term End8:11 November 2004
Predecessor8:Manfred Kolbe
Successor8:Geert Mackenroth
Office9:State Minister of Finances of Saxony
1Namedata9:Kurt Biedenkopf
Term Start9:31 January 2001
Term End9:2 May 2002
Predecessor9:Georg Milbradt
Successor9:Horst Metz
Office10:State Minister and Chief of the State Chancellery of Saxony
1Namedata10:Kurt Biedenkopf
Term Start10:27 October 1999
Term End10:31 January 2001
Predecessor10:Günter Meyer
Successor10:Georg Brüggen
Office11:State Secretary and Chief of the State Chancellery of Mecklenburg-Vorpommern
1Namedata11:Berndt Seite
Term Start11:8 December 1994
Term End11:2 November 1998
Predecessor11:Gabriele Wurzel
Successor11:Otto Ebnet
Birth Name:Karl Ernst Thomas de Maizière
Birth Date:21 January 1954
Birth Place:Bonn, West Germany
Signature:Signature of Thomas de Maizière.png
Party:Christian Democratic Union
Spouse:Martina de Maizière
Children:3
Father:Ulrich de Maizière
Relatives:Lothar de Maizière (cousin)
Branch: Bundeswehr
Serviceyears:1972–1974
Rank:Oberleutnant
Unit:Army (Heer) / Panzerbrigade 34

Karl Ernst Thomas de Maizière (pronounced as /de/; born 21 January 1954) is a German politician of the Christian Democratic Union (CDU) who served as Federal Minister of the Interior from 2009 to 2011 and 2013 to 2018, as well as Federal Minister of Defence from 2011 to 2013. He previously served as Head of the Chancellery and Federal Minister for Special Affairs in the First Merkel cabinet from 2005 to 2009. Since 2009, he has been a member of the Bundestag for Meißen.

Along with Ursula von der Leyen and Wolfgang Schäuble, De Maizière was one of only three ministers to have continuously served in Chancellor Angela Merkel's cabinets from 2005 until 2018.[1] Together with von der Leyen, he was widely looked on as a possible future successor to Merkel.[2] Before his appointment to the federal cabinet, he served as a minister in the state government of Saxony, including as chief of staff to the Minister-President, State Minister of Finance and State Minister of Justice.

Early life and education

Maizière was born in Bonn to the later Inspector general of the Bundeswehr, Ulrich de Maizière. He graduated at the Aloisiuskolleg in Bonn and studied law and history at the Westfälische Wilhelms-Universität in Münster and the University of Freiburg. He passed his first state examination in law in 1979 and his second 1982, earning his Doctor of law (Dr. jur.) in 1986.[3]

He belongs to a noble family originally from Maizières-lès-Metz[4] who, as Huguenots, had fled France for asylum in Prussia in the late 17th century.[5] The Maizière family still attended French-language schools and Huguenot churches in Berlin until the beginning of the 20th century. His cousin Lothar de Maizière is also a CDU politician and was the last, and only democratically elected, Premier of the German Democratic Republic, who later served as Federal Minister of Special Affairs in the government of Helmut Kohl until his resignation following the discovery of his affiliation with the GDR secret service.

Political career

Early career in state politics

Maizière worked for the governing mayor (prime minister) of West Berlin (Baron Richard von Weizsäcker and Eberhard Diepgen),[6] before becoming a member of the West German team in the negotiations on German reunification. After 1990 he worked with re-establishing democratic structures in states that were part of the former German Democratic Republic. He became secretary of state at the ministry of culture of the state of Mecklenburg-Vorpommern in November 1990. From December 1994 to 1998 he was chief of staff of the Chancellery of Mecklenburg-Vorpommern.

He served as the chief of the Saxon Chancellery from 1999 to 2001, with the rank of cabinet minister. As chief of staff to Kurt Biedenkopf, he helped negotiate the special Solidarity Pact designed to finance the reconstruction of the former East Germany.[6] From 2001 to 2002 he served as the minister of finance of Saxony, from 2002 to 2004 minister of justice, and from 2004 to 2005 as minister of the interior.[7]

Chief of Staff at the Federal Chancellery (2005–2009)

On 17 October 2005, Maizière was nominated as a member of the Federal Government as chief of the Chancellor's office and as federal minister for special affairs in the first Merkel cabinet.[7] He took office on 22 November 2005, after Merkel's election as Chancellor by the Bundestag. In his capacity as chief of staff of the chancellery, he also functioned as deputy president of the German Institute for International and Security Affairs (Stiftung Wissenschaft und Politik).

Between 2007 and 2009, Maizière was one of 32 members of the Second Commission on the modernization of the federal state, which was established to reform the division of powers between federal and state authorities in Germany.

Federal Minister of the Interior (2009–2011)

He was elected in Meißen. In the negotiations to form a coalition government following the 2009 federal elections, Maizière led the CDU/CSU delegation in the working group on taxes, national budget, and financial policy; with Hermann Otto Solms of the FDP as joint chairman. Following the formation of the Second Merkel cabinet, he took office as Federal Minister of the Interior.

As Interior Minister, Maizière long played down security worries, but he abruptly changed course late in 2010, giving warnings that there were serious indications of terror attacks being prepared in Europe and the United States.[8] In July 2010, he outlawed the Internationale Humanitäre Hilfsorganisation (IHH), a charity registered in Frankfurt, because of its alleged links to the militant Palestinian organization Hamas, arguing that "the IHH has, under the cover of humanitarian aid, supported Gaza Strip-based so-called social associations which are attributable to Hamas, for a long period of time and to a considerable financial extent."[9] That same month, Maizière announced that Germany would take over and release two prisoners of the Guantanamo Bay detention camp.[10]

In October 2010, Maizière and Transport Minister Peter Ramsauer banned arrivals of all air cargo from Yemen, after the German authorities had been tipped off by a foreign intelligence service that there were explosives inside a U.S.-bound parcel trans-shipped at Cologne Bonn Airport.[11]

Minister of Defence (2011–2013)

On 2 March 2011, Merkel announced that Maizière was to take over from Karl-Theodor zu Guttenberg, the federal defence minister who had resigned from office the previous day.[12] On 3 March, he was formally appointed to this post.[13] He held the defence ministry portfolio until 17 December 2013.

Signaling one of the biggest shake-ups in decades for the German military, in 2011 Maizière unveiled plans to reduce troop numbers, cut bureaucracy, and eliminate duplication inside the Federal Ministry of Defence. Under these proposals, the army was to be turned into a wholly professional force.[14]

On the occasion of the sixtieth anniversary of the diplomatic relations between German and India, Maizière participated in the first joint cabinet meeting of the two countries' governments in Delhi in May 2011.[15] On 7 June 2011, he attended the state dinner hosted by President Barack Obama in honor of Chancellor Angela Merkel at the White House.[16]

Speaking to the German newspaper Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung in February 2012, Maizière said that an Israel Defense Forces strike on Iran's nuclear facilities was "highly unlikely" to succeed, and noted that such a strike would cause "obvious political damage."[17] During a meeting in Berlin in March 2012, he warned Israel's Defense Minister Ehud Barak against an attack on Iran, joining other Western countries which were applying heavy international pressure on Israel to prevent it from attacking Iran’s nuclear facilities.[18] [19]

In 2012, Maizière told a gathering of army reservists that he considered the U.S. strategy of using drones for targeted killings a "strategic mistake". According to the online news edition of the German public television broadcaster ARD, Maizière had said he thought it was unwise to have U.S. commanders direct such attacks from their bases in the United States.[20]

Second appointment as Federal Minister of the Interior (2013–2018)

In the negotiations to form a government following the 2013 federal elections, Maizière led the CDU/CSU members in the working group on foreign affairs, defense, and development cooperation; his co-chair from the SPD was Frank-Walter Steinmeier. On 17 December 2013, he was appointed as Federal Minister of the Interior for a second time.[21] In addition, he co-chairs the EPP Justice and Home Affairs Ministers Meeting, alongside Esteban González Pons.[22]

On 23 February 2014, Bild am Sonntag reported that Maizière and other members of the government, as well as leading figures in business, were under NSA surveillance. The newspaper report, quoting an unnamed NSA official, said the U.S. was particularly interested in the interior minister "because he is a close aide of Merkel, who seeks his advice on many issues and was rumored to be promoting his candidacy for the post of NATO secretary-general."[23] [24] From the beginning of 2015, the left-wing opposition and media commentators have repeatedly criticized de Maizière over his record as chief of staff in 2005–09, and over what he knew about Germany's Federal Intelligence Service (BND) helping U.S. agencies to spy on European firms such as the defence manufacturer Airbus.[25]

In late 2014, Maizière proposed a law according to which the government would have the power to withdraw the identity cards of potential foreign fighters and replace them with another form of identification; this was meant to allow government agencies to prevent Germans from leaving the country to join groups such as Islamic State in Iraq and Syria.[26] In May 2015, he banned Yuruyus, a leftist-terrorist newspaper published by the Turkish extremist group DHKP-C, and had his ministry order raids across the country in connection with this ban.[27]

By late 2015, amid the European migrant crisis, de Maizière urged that Europe should set a limit on the number of refugees it takes in and seek out those most clearly entitled to protection.[28] His critics say he failed to fight for more staff and budget for the Federal Office for Migration and Refugees (BAMF), which falls under his ministry, despite years of warnings from German states that the agency was being overwhelmed with asylum applications.[29] In an effort to better detect the identities of migrants arriving from Syria, Afghanistan and other trouble spots, de Maizière later spearheaded the introduction of an identity card for refugees.[30]

In 2016, Maizière banned the neo-Nazi group "White Wolves Terror Crew" (WWT) following raids on 15 properties across the country as worries were growing about a rise in right-wing sentiment after the influx of more than a million migrants the previous year.[31]

In January 2016, Maizière participated in the first joint cabinet meeting of the governments of Germany and Turkey in Berlin.[32]

Later career

After leaving government in 2018, Maizère served on the Committee on Finance. In addition to his work in parliament, he taught constitutional law at the University of Leipzig.[33]

Ahead of the Christian Democrats' leadership election in 2018, de Maizière publicly endorsed Annegret Kramp-Karrenbauer to succeed Angela Merkel as the party’s chair.[34]

Since 2019, de Maizière has been serving as chairman of the Deutsche Telekom Foundation.[35] Also in 2019, he was appointed by the Federal Ministry of the Interior, Building and Community to serve on the committee that oversaw the preparations for the 30th anniversary of German reunification.[36]

In 2020, de Maizière was appointed by NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg to co-chair (alongside A. Wess Mitchell) a group of experts to support his work in a reflection process to further strengthen NATO’s political dimension.[37]

In May 2020, de Maizière announced that he would not stand in the 2021 federal elections but instead resign from active politics by the end of the parliamentary term.[38]

Life after politics

In 2023, de Maizière and Heide Pfarr served as unpaid arbitrators for negotiations between German railway operator Deutsche Bahn and the Railway and Transport Union (EVG).[39]

Other activities

Recognition

Personal life

Maizière is married to Martina de Maizière, with whom he has three children. He is a Protestant.

In April 2023, de Maizière was one of the 22 guests at the ceremony in which Angela Merkel was decorated with the Grand Cross of the Order of Merit for special achievement by President Frank-Walter Steinmeier at Schloss Bellevue in Berlin.[42]

Publications

External links

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Notes and References

  1. Arne Delfs (22 January 2014), Merkel Succession Beckons After von der Leyen’s Defense Posting Businessweek.
  2. Arne Delfs (17 July 2014), Merkel at 60 Says No Rest on Laurels as Power Uncontested Bloomberg.
  3. Web site: Thomas de Maizière (CDU) . Federal Government . 18 August 2011 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20110805131628/http://www.bundesregierung.de/Webs/Breg/EN/Federal-Government/Cabinet/ThomasDeMaiziere/thomas-de-maiziere.html . 5 August 2011 .
  4. News: Die Familie de Maizière, eine deutsche Dynastie. Die Welt. de. Welt. 2011-03-06. 2017-11-14. Müller. Uwe.
  5. News: Merkel Is Quick to Fill Open Cabinet Position. Dempsey. Judy. Judy Dempsey. The New York Times. 2011-03-02. 2015-07-09.
  6. [Judy Dempsey]
  7. [Judy Dempsey]
  8. Erik Kirschbaum and Eric Kelsey (2 March 2011), German ministers in cabinet reshuffle Reuters.
  9. http://www.haaretz.com/news/diplomacy-defense/germany-outlaws-charity-over-alleged-hamas-links-1.301483 Germany outlaws charity over alleged Hamas links
  10. http://www.spiegel.de/international/germany/prisoner-plans-germany-agrees-to-take-two-inmates-from-guantanamo-a-705220.html Prisoner Plans: Germany Agrees to Take Two Inmates from Guantanamo
  11. http://www.haaretz.com/news/world/germany-tipped-off-britain-about-mail-bomb-minister-says-1.322159 Germany tipped off Britain about mail bomb, minister says
  12. News: Pidd. Helen. Angela Merkel appoints her closest adviser as defence minister. 11 July 2013. The Guardian. 2 March 2011.
  13. Web site: Neue Minister ernannt . . 3 March 2011 . 3 March 2011 . de . New ministers appointed .
  14. [Judy Dempsey]
  15. Günther Bannas (30 May 2011), Hoffnung auf „Eurofighter"-Geschäft: Erste deutsch-indische Regierungskonsultationen Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung.
  16. https://obamawhitehouse.archives.gov/the-press-office/2011/06/07/expected-attendees-tonights-state-dinner Expected Attendees at Tonight's State Dinner
  17. http://www.haaretz.com/news/diplomacy-defense/germany-israeli-military-strike-on-iran-unlikely-to-succeed-1.412501 Germany: Israeli military strike on Iran unlikely to succeed
  18. Ofer Aderet (27 March 2012), Germany official: Meeting with Israel's Barak left me 'more concerned' of war with Iran Haaretz.
  19. Barak Ravid (31 March 2012), Australia joins list of countries warning against Israeli strike on Iran Haaretz.
  20. [Judy Dempsey]
  21. News: Minister. 24 February 2014. Federal Ministry of the Interior. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20140206035143/http://www.bmi.bund.de/EN/Ministry/Minister/minister_node.html. 6 February 2014.
  22. http://www.epp.eu/about-us/structure/ Council of the EU and Ministerial meetings
  23. News: U.S. now bugging German ministers in place of Merkel: report. Reuters. 23 February 2014 . 25 February 2014.
  24. News: Merkel's aides now on NSA radar, claims Dutch news report. 24 February 2014. Germany News.Net.
  25. Erik Kirschbaum (29 April 2015), Close Merkel ally de Maiziere rejects charges he lied Reuters.
  26. Rainer Buergin and Arne Delfs (17 October 2014), Germany Clamps Down on Flow of Fighters to Islamic State Bloomberg News.
  27. https://www.nytimes.com/aponline/2015/05/06/world/europe/ap-eu-germany-turkey-paper-banned.html Germany Bans Extremist Turkish Paper, Conducts Raids
  28. Francois Murphy (26 November 2015), German interior minister calls for European refugee cap: newspaper Reuters.
  29. Noah Barkin (17 September 2015), Loyal Merkel ally in firing line over refugee crisis Reuters.
  30. Caroline Copley (9 December 2015), German cabinet approves identity card for refugees Reuters.
  31. Madeline Chambers (16 March 2016), Germany bans neo-Nazi group as fears of far-right grow Reuters.
  32. https://www.bundesregierung.de/Content/DE/Pressemitteilungen/BPA/2016/01/2015-01-15-deu-tuerk-regierungskonsultationen-breg.html Erste Deutsch-Türkische Regierungskonsultationen in Berlin
  33. http://www.lvz.de/Leipzig/Bildung/Thomas-de-Maiziere-lehrt-Jura-an-der-Leipziger-Uni Neuer Job: Thomas de Maizière lehrt Jura an der Leipziger Uni
  34. Christian Rothenberg (5 December 2018), So groß sind die Lager der Unterstützer für Merz, Spahn und Kramp-Karrenbauer Handelsblatt.
  35. https://www.telekom-stiftung.de/en/press/change-leadership Change in leadership: Thomas de Maizière to be the new Chairman
  36. https://www.bmi.bund.de/SharedDocs/pressemitteilungen/DE/2019/04/30-jahre-deu-einheit.html 30 Jahre Friedliche Revolution und Deutsche Einheit
  37. https://www.nato.int/cps/en/natohq/news_174756.htm Secretary General appoints group as part of NATO reflection process
  38. Markus Langner (12 May 2020), Ex-Bundesinnenminister De Maizière macht Schluss mit Bundestag BILD.
  39. Alfons Frese (26 July 2023), Schlichter empfehlen 410 Euro mehr: Tarifkonflikt bei der Bahn ist vorerst beendet Der Tagesspiegel.
  40. Dana Heide, Daniel Delhaes, Silke Kersting and Stephan Scheuer (6 September 2018), Thomas de Maizière hat sechs neue Jobs – auch einen bei der Telekom Handelsblatt.
  41. https://www.bundespraesident.de/SharedDocs/Reden/DE/Frank-Walter-Steinmeier/Reden/2019/06/190607-OV-Maiziere.html Speech given at the ceremony honoring Thomas de Maizière on 7 June 2019
  42. Kati Degenhardt (17 April 2023), Merkels emotionaler Dank: "Er hatte Vieles auszuhalten" T-Online.