Arno Lippert

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Arno Lippert (born April 19, 1904 in Berlin , † December 19, 1975 in Herford ) was a German politician ( CDU ).

Arno Lippert attended an elementary school and later a private commercial college . He trained in the iron wholesale and export business in Berlin and Essen . In the Weimar Republic he was politically active in the youth movement and also in the trade union federation of employees (GDA). From 1924 Lippert worked as an employee at the Linke-Hofmann-Lauchhammer Aktiengesellschaft (LHL) and from 1929 as a planner at the Commercial Investment Trust (CIT). In 1936 he became an independent property manager in Berlin and studied at the Berlin Business School , from which he graduated with a diploma in business teaching . He was drafted by the Wehrmacht in 1940 and was subsequently taken prisoner by the Soviets .

After the Second World War , Lippert became head of the Rackow School in Berlin in 1945 and joined the CDU the following year. In the Berlin election in 1950 he was elected to the Berlin House of Representatives. In the following election in 1954 he was elected to the district council in the Neukölln district and was always deputy head of the district council. It was not until the 1971 election that Lippert was re-elected to the House of Representatives, in March 1975 he resigned from parliament for reasons of age and died after nine months in Herford.

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