Horst Seehofer | |
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Minister for the Interior, Building and Community | |
In office 14 March 2018 – 8 December 2021 | |
Chancellor | Angela Merkel |
Preceded by | Thomas de Maizière (Interior) |
Succeeded by | Nancy Faeser (Interior and Community) Klara Geywitz (Housing, Urban Development and Building) |
Leader of the Christian Social Union | |
In office 25 October 2008 – 19 January 2019 | |
General Secretary | Karl-Theodor zu Guttenberg Alexander Dobrindt Andreas Scheuer Markus Blume |
Preceded by | Erwin Huber |
Succeeded by | Markus Söder |
Minister-president of Bavaria | |
In office 27 October 2008 – 13 March 2018 | |
Deputy | Martin Zeil Ilse Aigner |
Preceded by | Günther Beckstein |
Succeeded by | Markus Söder |
President of the Bundesrat | |
In office 1 November 2011 – 31 October 2012 | |
First Vice President | Hannelore Kraft |
Preceded by | Hannelore Kraft |
Succeeded by | Winfried Kretschmann |
Acting President Germany | |
In office 17 February 2012 – 18 March 2012 | |
Chancellor | Angela Merkel |
Preceded by | Christian Wulff |
Succeeded by | Joachim Gauck |
Minister for Food, Agriculture and Consumer Protection | |
In office 22 November 2005 – 27 October 2008 | |
Chancellor | Angela Merkel |
Preceded by | Renate Künast |
Succeeded by | Ilse Aigner |
Minister for Health | |
In office 6 May 1992 – 26 October 1998 | |
Chancellor | Helmut Kohl |
Preceded by | Gerda Hasselfeldt |
Succeeded by | Andrea Fischer |
Member of the Bundestag for Ingolstadt | |
In office 4 November 1980 – 27 October 2008 | |
Preceded by | Karl Heinz Gierenstein |
Succeeded by | Reinhard Brandl |
Personal details | |
Born | Horst Lorenz Seehofer 4 July 1949 Ingolstadt, Bavaria, West Germany (current-day Germany) |
Political party | Christian Social Union |
Spouse | Karin Starck |
Children | 4 |
Signature | |
Website | Official website |
Horst Lorenz Seehofer (born 4 July 1949) is a German politician who served as Minister for the Interior, Building and Community under Chancellor Angela Merkel from 2018 to 2021. A member of the Christian Social Union (CSU), he served as the 18th minister-president of Bavaria from 2008 to 2018 and Leader of the Christian Social Union in Bavaria from 2008 to 2019.
First elected to the Bundestag in 1980, he served as Minister for Health and Social Security in the Christian-liberal cabinets of Helmut Kohl from 1992 to 1998, going to the opposition afterwards and returning to the government as Minister for Food, Agriculture and Consumer Protection in the grand coalition cabinet of Angela Merkel from 2005 to 2008. Following a disastrous result for his party in the 2008 Bavarian state election, he became both Leader of the CSU and Minister-president of Bavaria, an office he had never sought, after forming a coalition government with the liberal Free Democratic Party (FDP), the first coalition on state level in five decades. In 2013 he returned his party to an absolute majority on state level. He served as President of the Bundesrat from 2011 to 2012. As such he was acting head of state of Germany from the resignation of President Christian Wulff on 17 February 2012 until the election of Joachim Gauck as Wulff's successor on 18 March 2012.[1]
A staunch opponent of Chancellor Angela Merkel's response to the 2010s migrant crisis,[2] Seehofer threatened to file a formal complaint with the Constitutional Court,[3] with the historic CDU/CSU alliance in danger of splitting and running against each other in the whole of Germany for the first time, but neither happened. He is a proponent of a federal cap on the number of refugees the German government is to take in.[4] After faring historically badly in the 2017 federal election, the party receiving its worst result since 1949, and unsuccessfully trying to run for a third term as minister-president in 2018, he was pressured by his party to resign and instead accepted the office of Minister for the Interior, Building and Community (originally intended for Joachim Herrmann) in Merkel's fourth government, in order to shape the migrant policy after his views. In July 2018, a week-long dissent between Seehofer and Merkel nearly brought down the government and again seriously threatened a CDU/CSU split, but they ultimately found a compromise.