Honorific-Suffix: | MdB |
Wolfgang Kubicki | |
Office: | Vice President of the Bundestag (on proposal of the FDP-group) |
Term Start: | 24 October 2017 |
Office1: | First Deputy Leader of the Free Democratic Party |
Term Start1: | 7 December 2013 |
Leader1: | Christian Lindner |
Predecessor1: | Christian Lindner |
Office2: | Leader of the Free Democratic Party in the Landtag of Schleswig-Holstein |
Term Start3: | 5 May 1992 |
Term End3: | 16 August 1993 |
Predecessor3: | Wolf-Dieter Zumpfort |
Successor3: | Ekkehard Klug |
Term Start2: | 23 April 1996 |
Term End2: | 14 December 2017 |
Predecessor2: | Ekkehard Klug |
Successor2: | Christopher Vogt |
Office4: | Leader of the Free Democratic Party in Schleswig-Holstein |
Term Start4: | September 1989 |
Term End4: | September 1993 |
Predecessor4: | Jens Ruge |
Successor4: | Jürgen Koppelin |
Office5: | Member of the Bundestag for Schleswig-Holstein |
Term Start5: | 24 October 2017 |
Constituency5: | Free Democratic Party List |
Predecessor5: | Multi-member district |
Term Start6: | 17 October 2002 |
Term End6: | 9 December 2002 |
Successor6: | Christel Happach-Kasan |
Predecessor6: | Multi-member district |
Constituency6: | Free Democratic Party List |
Term Start7: | 20 December 1990 |
Term End7: | 2 August 1992 |
Successor7: | Michaela Blunk |
Predecessor7: | Multi-member district |
Constituency7: | Free Democratic Party List |
Office8: | Member of the Landtag of Schleswig-Holstein |
Term Start8: | 5 May 1992 |
Term End8: | 14 December 2017 |
Successor8: | Jörg Hansen |
Predecessor8: | Multi-member district |
Birth Date: | 3 March 1952 |
Birth Place: | Braunschweig, West Germany |
Party: | Free Democratic Party |
Alma Mater: | University of Kiel |
Wolfgang Kubicki (born 3 March 1952) is a German politician of the Free Democratic Party of Germany (FDP) and member of the Bundestag from 1990 until 1992 and 2017 onwards. He has been vice chairman of the FDP in Germany since December 2013. Since 24 October 2017 he has served as Vice President of the Bundestag. From 1992 to 1993 and from 1996 to 2017 he served as chairman of the FDP-group in the Schleswig-Holstein state parliament..[1]
After high school diploma in 1970 in Braunschweig Kubicki studied economics at the University of Kiel, where Peer Steinbrück was among his fellow students.[2] He graduated in 1975. After that he worked for a consulting company and from 1978 in a Steuerberater ("tax advisor") office. From 1981 to 1983 he worked as a researcher for the FDP in the Schleswig-Holstein Landtag. He finished a second degree in law, completed while working, at the University of Kiel in 1982 with the first state examination. In 1985 he completed the second state examination and has worked as a lawyer since.
Kubicki joined the FDP in 1971. In 1972/73 he was deputy federal chairman of the Liberal University Association and in 1975/76 state chairman of the Young Democrats in Schleswig-Holstein. Subsequently, Kubicki was first elected to the state executive committee of the Schleswig-Holstein FDP in 1976, where he served until 1988, most recently as deputy state chairman.
From 1987 to 1989, he was chairman of the Rendsburg-Eckernförde FDP district association. He relinquished this office after his election as state chairman in September 1989. In September 1993, Kubicki resigned as state chairman in the wake of the Schönberg Landfill Affair. As state chairman, Kubicki was also a member of the Liberals' federal executive committee. He has done so again since 1997. He was also his party's top candidate in state elections in Schleswig-Holstein in 1992, 2000, 2005, 2009, 2012 and 2017.[3]
Kubicki lobbied since 2000 for Guido Westerwelle to be elected federal chairman of the FDP and to become parliamentary party leader of the FDP parliamentary group in the Bundestag.[4] [5] [6] Westerwelle thus pushed Wolfgang Gerhardt out of both positions at the time. In mid-December 2010, Kubicki publicly advocated for Westerwelle's replacement as party leader of the FDP in May 2011. He compared the situation of the FDP with the late phase of the GDR and blamed the party leadership for the poll results below 5%.[7] He said that the FDP was not in a good position to be replaced.
In the 2012 state election, the FDP, with Kubicki as its top candidate, received a result of 8.2 percent of the second votes.[8] While this was a significant loss compared to the 2009 state election, when 14.9 percent was achieved, it was still the second-best election result achieved in Schleswig-Holstein. Previously, the FDP had been eliminated from six state parliaments. Therefore, the result was considered an extraordinary success, which was mainly attributed to Kubicki and labeled the "Kubicki effect".[9] In polls, he achieved 54 percent approval of the electorate of Schleswig-Holstein (compared to 18 percent for Philipp Rösler) and 63 percent saw large differences between the state and federal FDP. Although Kubicki had never been sparing with criticism of his own party's federal policies, he already emphasized in the ZDF election broadcast that this result, which was perceived as an election victory, was precisely also a success for the federal party. In doing so, he clearly countered putsch rumors against the chairman of the federal FDP Philipp Rösler that had previously arisen in public even before the end of the election evening. In August 2012, Kubicki announced his intention to run as the top candidate for the Schleswig-Holstein FDP in the 2013 federal election.[10]
At the 2013 FDP federal party convention, Kubicki succeeded then-Development Minister Dirk Niebel, who was eliminated in the first round of voting, as an assessor on the federal presidium. Kubicki then won in a fight vote against Health Minister Daniel Bahr.[11] The Extraordinary Party Congress of the FDP in December 2013 elected Kubicki as 1st Deputy to the new party leader Christian Lindner with 89.87% of the vote.[12] The 2015 FDP Federal Party Congress confirmed Kubicki in this position with 94.2% of the vote, and the 2017 FDP Federal Party Congress with 92.29%.[13]
Kubicki is a member of the FDP's Executive Committee.
Kubicki is a member of the advisory board of the German-Arab Society.
In May 2018, Kubicki failed with his demand at the FDP party congress to ease economic sanctions against Russia.After the poisoning of Alexei Navalny, Kubicki proposed an import ban on Russian gas. He supported the FDP parliamentary group's proposal for a moratorium on the construction of the Nord Stream 2 gas pipeline.[14]
In March 2024, Kubicki declared that he would vote in favor of the delivery of Taurus KEPD 350 cruise missiles to Ukraine.[15]
In August 2018, Kubicki commented on the Chemnitz protests blaming Merkel's migration policy for the roots of the riots. This position resulted in criticism by fellow party members including Marie-Agnes Strack-Zimmermann and Ria Schröder. However, he said, this is not an explanation for agitation, racism and violence. However, other party members such as Christian Linder and Nicola Beer defended Kubicki, who later wrote in a statement on social media that citizens "have the feeling that the state is allowing itself to be paraded - by the right and the left. Shouting 'Germany sucks' and throwing paving stones at police officers is at least as condemnable as right-wing agitation against alleged migrants."[16]
On February 5, 2020, Kubicki defended the election of Thomas Kemmerich (FDP) as Thuringia's prime minister with the votes of the FDP, AfD and CDU. The vote of Kemmerich with help of the AfD was rejected by other parties and resulted in the Thuringian government crisis.[17]
On April 28, 2020, Kubicki criticized the Robert Koch Institute (RKI) and its president Lothar Wieler and accused the published figures of being rather politically motivated than scientifically based, as according to Kubicki the suggested implementations of restrictions falling numbers.[18] Furthermore, Kubicki criticized the federal government and the Federal Ministry of Health under Jens Spahn for poor management of vaccine procurement, the introduction of the Corona-Warn-App, as well as for imposing curfews as a mean of dealing with the virus.[19] In June 2021, Kubicki called for the repeal of all measures which restricting fundamental rights according to him because the legal basis had lapsed due to persistent 7-day incidences below 35.[20] [21]
Kubicki has publicly declared that he has violated against the lockdowns set by the federal government himself.[22]
In November 2021, Kubicki called the chairman of the World Medical Association, Frank Ulrich Montgomery the "Saddam Hussein of the medical profession."[23] Montgomery had previously sharply criticized the FDP's Corona policy. After strong criticism, Kubicki apologized to Montgomery.[24] In the speech in which he attacked Montgomery, he also criticized Corona management in parts of southern Germany. He also claimed that Markus Söder was putting his own career ambitions ahead of protecting the public, calling Söders regulations to be out of character and "humanly pathetic."
In December 2021, he positioned himself against general mandatory vaccination against Covid-19 and formulated a motion against it with other FDP deputies. Kubicki sees the general vaccination requirement as unconstitutional and called it a serious breach of trust. In addition, he stated that many supporters of compulsory vaccination seemed to be primarily concerned with revenge and retaliation against the unvaccinated.[25] As a result, he was also criticized within the party.
In early 2022, Kubicki called on Bavarian Minister President Markus Söder to resign, accusing him of misleading the public regarding the role of the unvaccinated in the infection process. Söder had previously spoken of a "pandemic of the unvaccinated" and in mid-November 2021 had referred to figures according to which the incidence among vaccinated persons was 110, but that among unvaccinated persons was 1469. It later became known that this calculation added people with unknown vaccination status to the unvaccinated group, potentially overestimating the role of the unvaccinated.[26]
The Schönberg landfill (now Ihlenberg landfill) in Mecklenburg-Vorpommern was created from the former "VEB Landfill Schönberg". In 1991, Kubicki began advising the state of Mecklenburg-Vorpommern on its privatization for a fee of DM 850,000. He was soon accused of giving the state bad advice and charging excessive fees. Above all, the state-owned operating company had been left to bear the risks and environmental obligations and had almost been driven into insolvency, while one of Kubicki's business partners, the Lübeck waste contractor Adolf Hilmer, had "skimmed off 52 million marks in profit in the first three years alone" as a tenant.[27]
However, Kubicki is said to have concealed his contact with Hilmer. At the beginning of 1993, the State Audit Office of Mecklenburg-Vorpommern criticized the "miserable conduct of negotiations" by the Mecklenburg Ministry of the Environment and estimated that the state had suffered damages of 100 million marks as a result of "gagging contracts."[28] The Mecklenburg-Vorpommern state parliament convened a committee of inquiry to clarify the allegations and later sued Kubicki for damages. Kubicki resigned from the chairmanship of the FDP and the parliamentary group in Kiel in 1993. However, the Federal Court of Justice ruled in Kubicki's favor in the legal dispute, which had lasted for years.[29]
Kubicki is married to attorney Annette Marberth-Kubicki. They live in Strande and maintain a holiday residence in Santa Ponsa.[32]
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