Alfred Gunzel

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Alfred Günzel (born August 19, 1901 in Berlin ; † September 24, 1973 in Bad Brückenau , Lower Franconia ) was a German politician ( FDP ).

Alfred Günzel attended an elementary school and a private school , which he graduated with secondary school leaving certificate. He did a banking apprenticeship and then worked on the management boards of various industrial companies. He was chairman of the management board of the Mauxion chocolate factory in Berlin and factory director of the Muratti AG cigarette factory in Berlin.

After the Second World War , Günzel became a managing board member of the Protection Association of Securities Owners eV Berlin and joined the FDP in the Schöneberg district . In the Berlin election in 1950 he was elected to the Berlin House of Representatives. In 1953, Günzel was elected as a representative of the House of Representatives as chairman of the board of directors of Sender Free Berlin (SFB). In the same way he also became a member of the supervisory board of the Deutsche Klassenlotterie Berlin (DKLB). In the following election in 1954 he was re-elected. In the autumn of 1955, the Berlin Court of Auditors objected to the accounting modalities of the members of the supervisory board of the class lottery. After lengthy debates, the three members of the supervisory board had to resign from parliament, first Günzel for the FDP in December 1955, and later Curt Swolinzky (SPD) and Lothar Wille (CDU). Günzel's successor in the House of Representatives was Olga Mannstaedt (1908–1992). From 1952 to 1955, Günzel was a representative of Berlin on the FDP federal executive committee .

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