Christine Muscheler-Frohne

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Christine Muscheler-Frohne (candidate for state parliament 1987)

Christine Muscheler-Frohne (born April 2, 1950 in Beuren am Ried ) is a German politician from the Rottweil district . She is one of the founding members of the Green Baden-Württemberg with membership number 325, was a member of the first state executive from 1980 to 1984 and from 1988 to 1992 a member of the state parliament of Baden-Württemberg.

Career

After completing secondary school , Christine Muscheler-Frohne was trained as a kindergarten teacher. Via her second educational path, she completed an apprenticeship as a primary and secondary school teacher in Freiburg with the subject combination of art education and German and then worked as a teacher in Rottweil . Since the mid-1970s she was active in the ecology movement and in citizens' initiatives against nuclear power plants (resistance against the Wyhl nuclear power plant with construction site occupation). In 1979 she represented the Rottweil district at the founding meeting of the Greens in Sindelfingen . She was also instrumental in founding the Rottweil der Grünen district association. In the run-up to the party congress in 1980, at which the first regular state board was to be elected, she organized a women’s meeting in the old church in Fluorn-Winzeln (district of Rottweil ), at which a declaration of equality between men and women was formulated. In her first public speech at the party congress, Christine Muscheler-Frohne successfully called for a state executive board with equal representation and a quota for women based on the zip principle in all offices and mandates of the party.

Party offices and fields of politics

From 1980 to 1984 she was a member of the state executive of the Greens. As its spokeswoman, she tried to unite the party despite the most diverse political fields in which the interests of Greens were represented. These included the peace question with the idea of ​​unilateral disarmament and rejection of the military blocs, the rejection of nuclear power plants , the rejection of major projects (airport construction, Rhine-Main-Danube Canal), environmental policy ( forest dying , waste prevention , energy transition ) and the women's question ( § 218 , Luise Pusch , " Quotation ").

In 1984 she ran for the state parliament of Baden-Wuerttemberg in the constituency of Lake Constance , but missed entry with the second best green constituency result in the administrative district of Tübingen , as the Greens only had one seat here. However, it would have moved up in 1986 for Fritz Kuhn if Kuhn's then green district association of Tübingen had not narrowly decided to repeal the originally adopted rotation resolution. In return, she was nominated for the state elections in 1988 in the safe constituency of Tübingen and was a member of the state parliament through a second mandate until 1992. During this time she was the group's energy policy spokesperson and a deputy member of the Environment Committee.

Engagement in initiatives

  • Member of the state working group for women
  • Delegate of the Greens in the State Women's Council BW (until early 1991)
  • Member of the Federation for the Environment and Nature Conservation BUND
  • Founding member of the "Post-Chernobyl Citizens' Initiative for a World Without a Nuclear Threat"
  • Founding member "Initiative Freie Energiestadt Rottweil"

classification

Farmhouse Sinkinger Weg

Muscheler-Frohne was considered to be an exponent of the left wing of the party in the parliamentary group of the Greens at that time, so that her influence in the faction dominated by representatives of the realpolitical wing remained small. At the swearing in of Erwin Teufel , who was elected as his successor after the resignation of Prime Minister Lothar Späth in 1991, Christine Muscheler-Frohne and her parliamentary colleague Jürgen Rochlitz caused a scandal. The two members of the fundamentalist wing unrolled a banner with the inscription: Baden-Württemberg is there for every arms-shoving. You were expelled from the room. In an interview with the SDR, she announced that she would leave the party if the party should delete its commitment to pacifism from its program. The undisguised criticism of her own party also led to speculation that she had distanced herself so far that it was to be seen as a resignation. In 2019 she was still living in her self-renovated farmhouse inzimmer ob Rottweil , where, as a “part-time farmer”, she mainly supplied herself with her own horticultural products.

literature

  • Hochreuther, Ina: Women in Parliament. Southwest German MPs since 1919 , Stuttgart 1992, pp. 146–148.
  • Hochreuther, Ina: Women in Parliament. Southwest German MPs from 1919 to the present, Stuttgart 2002, pp. 192–194.
  • "We were highly motivated, but politically very inexperienced". About the participation of citizens' initiative members and women in founding the Greens. An interview with Christine Muscheler-Frohne, in: Hermann, Winne / Schwegler-Rohmeis, Wolfgang: Green way through black country. 10 Years of Greens in Baden-Württemberg , Stuttgart 1989, pp. 41–51.

swell

  • Landesarchiv Baden-Württemberg, Department Main State Archive Stuttgart, R 1/002 D912008 / 111, conversation with Christine Muscheler-Frohne about a possible split in the Greens, Monday, May 13, 1991, provenance SWF 1, context: radio broadcasts of the SDR, scope 0 : 05: 50 Permalink

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Hochreuther, Ina: Women in Parliament. Southwest German MPs since 1919 , Stuttgart 1992, p. 148.
  2. a b Armin Schulz: Part of the DNA comes from the Black Forest | Portrait | In the Rottweil district, the Greens came up with the women's quota | Christine Muscheler-Frohne was at the forefront 40 years ago . Ed .: Black Forest Messenger. No. 285 , December 9, 2019.
  3. ^ A b Hermann, Winne / Rohmeis, Wolfgang-Rohmeis: Green way through black land. 10 Years of Greens in Baden-Württemberg, Stuttgart 1989, p. 45.
  4. Hochreuther, Ina, pp. 146–148
  5. ^ Hermann, Winne / Schwegler-Rohmeis, Wolfgang: Green way through black country. 10 Years of Greens in Baden-Württemberg , Stuttgart 1989, pp. 41–43.
  6. taz Journal: The Green Danger (1998), pp. 26/27
  7. Documentation of the rotation debate at the Tübingen Greens 1985  ( page no longer available , search in web archivesInfo: The link was automatically marked as defective. Please check the link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. (PDF; 991 kB)@1@ 2Template: Toter Link / www.bawue.gruene-fraktion.de  
  8. Birgitt Bender, parliamentary group spokeswoman for the Greens in the Baden -Wuerttemberg state parliament: In the interests of the Greens? Re: Letter to the editor from Christine Muscheler-Frohne / Rose Glaser, taz from May 19, 2008 . In: TAZ . No. 2523 , June 3, 1988, pp. 20 ( wlb-stuttgart.de ).
  9. Article on the election of the green parliamentary group in 1988  ( page no longer available , search in web archivesInfo: The link was automatically marked as defective. Please check the link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. (PDF; 458 kB)@1@ 2Template: Toter Link / www.bawue.gruene-fraktion.de  
  10. ^ Dpa report: Opposition MPs also voted for Erwin Teufel Große ... In: Bonner General-Anzeiger . January 23, 1991, p. 12 ( wlb-stuttgart.de ).
  11. ^ Ina Hochreuther: Women in Parliament. Southwest German parliamentarians from 1919 until today . Stuttgart 2002, p. 193 .
  12. ^ Hochreuther, Ina: Women in Parliament. Southwest German MPs since 1919 , Stuttgart 1929, p. 148