DVU Schleswig-Holstein

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DVU Schleswig-Holstein
Chairman Ingeborg Lobocki
resolution January 1, 2011

DVU Schleswig-Holstein was the regional association of the right-wing extremist party of the German People's Union (DVU) in Schleswig-Holstein . From 1992 to 1996 she was represented in the local parliament , but the parliamentary group disintegrated after just one year. After the re-entry failed in 1996, the party did not run for elections in this state. The DVU regional association was dissolved in 2011 as part of the merger with the NPD . State chairmen were among others Ingo Stawitz , Klaus Sojka and Renate Köhler . Ingeborg Lobocki was the last state chairman .

Member of the state parliament of Schleswig-Holstein

In the Schleswig-Holstein state elections on April 4, 1992 , the DVU received 6.3% of the votes and became the third largest party. She moved into the state parliament there with six members.

In the election on March 24, 1996, however, it failed with 4.3% of the five percent hurdle ; in the state elections of 2000, 2005, 2009 and 2012 she did not run. MPs were:

Parliamentary work

Ingo Stawitz became chairman of the six-member parliamentary group in Schleswig-Holstein. Just a few weeks after the beginning of the legislative period, the MP Manfred Clasen died of a heart attack; Ingo Schachtschneider moved up for him.

The MPs took part in the plenary sessions of the state parliament, but did not participate in the committees. Instead, they hindered the state parliament with a flood of applications and inquiries, which mainly focused on the issues of asylum and immigration policy. Applications were usually formulated in such a way that they already expressed positions that offend foreigners in the text of the application. B. "Investigation of all asylum seekers for epidemics". The parliamentary group was also xenophobic in speeches, criticized asylum seekers as criminals and attributed the low level of education to the overloading of schools by foreigners. In addition, the parliamentary group tried to relativize the crimes of National Socialism and Germany's war guilt. One application was, for example, to “clean schoolbooks from anti-German dirt and trash”. Parliamentary President Ute Erdsiek refused to discuss this proposal.

The DVU parliamentary group refused to participate in a visit to Israel by the state parliament that had already been agreed during the Second Gulf War . Another scandal occurred when the DVU parliamentary group deliberately used the phrase “the victims of tyranny and allied terror” when laying a wreath at Neuengamme concentration camp near Hamburg, which left open which tyranny was meant and with the mention of an “allied” Terror “put crimes into perspective. The parliamentary group also did not take part in a joint visit to the camp.

The behavior of the DVU gave rise to a debate in the Schleswig-Holstein state parliament at which the DVU and other organizations negotiated under the title National Socialist Violent Crimes and the New Right-Wing Extremism . During the debate, the former Minister of Education Peter Bendixen (CDU) described the DVU in a reply to the center politician Joseph Wirth as enemies of the people and accused them of making dull German talk and hate speech acceptable in a German parliament.

At the end of May 1993, the faction disintegrated after only one year; A month earlier, the MP Renate Köhler, who was the only one who was loyal to the federal party, left the parliamentary group on the advice of the same. The MPs got into a dispute with the federal party over finances. As a result, Stawitz accused the DVU federal chairman, Gerhard Frey , of “being interested in money and not in politics for the German cause”. Thienemann expressed himself similarly: "Money is for everything - we didn't play along with that". These disputes were ultimately expressed in a procedure brought by Frey against Ingo Stawitz for two unpaid advertisements in the Deutsche Wochen-Zeitung worth 64,000 DM. The lawsuit was ultimately dismissed by the Itzehoe Regional Court.

The five renegade MPs initially wanted to join the Republicans , but were not accepted there due to their Ruhstorfer demarcation resolution from 1990. Finally, the MPs Schachtschneider, Stawitz and Voss joined the DLVH, and Friese six months later, which enabled them to form an independent parliamentary group with four MPs (the minimum for a parliamentary group in Schleswig-Holstein); Thienemann remained non-attached. In the middle of 1995, however, Friese returned to the DVU and thus the DLVH lost its parliamentary group status again. Thienemann also returned to DVU during this time.

The Kiel public prosecutor's office investigated the DVU parliamentary group on suspicion of embezzlement and embezzlement. The proceedings were discontinued after the DVU MPs had returned the entire office equipment to the state parliament administration. In a further investigation it became clear that the DVU parliamentary group was ultimately used as Frey's puppet in order to acquire funds for his publishing house. In the course of a further procedure, this time intensified by the DVU itself, after Ute Erdsieck had refused to reimburse the party for election campaign costs because of irregularities, it became clear that the DVU Schleswig-Holstein held its party congresses under dubious and conspiratorial conditions. Nevertheless, the DVU won the legal battle and was reimbursed for the election costs.

Another story

The DVU Schleswig-Holstein was one of the four regional associations of the DVU that spoke out against the merger of the DVU with the NPD in 2010/11 . After a lawsuit by the DVU Schleswig-Holstein, the merger was declared ineffective by the Munich Regional Court I in an injunction. The opponents of the merger of DVU and NPD had their lawyers declare the main proceedings in May 2012 to be over. The merger of DVU and NPD is now valid.

However, many former DVU members did not make the merger with and gathered in by Christian Worch founded party 's rights , including Ingeborg Lobocki, the last chairman of the party. She became vice chairman of The Right.

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Biography on the pages of the Schleswig-Holstein state parliament
  2. ^ Jungle World : The New Party "The Right". Rising from the Ruins.
  3. ^ A b Gerhard Hertel: The DVU - Danger from the Right Wing ( Memento from October 7, 2005 in the Internet Archive ). In: current analyzes. Vol. 12, 1998, Hanns Seidel Foundation (PDF).
  4. ^ A b c Jürgen Hoffmann / Norbert Lepszy: The DVU in the state parliaments: incompetent, quarreling, politically incapable, a balance sheet of right-wing extremist politics after ten years . Ed .: Konrad-Adenauer-Stiftung (=  internal study No. 163/1998 ). Sankt Augustin 1998, ISBN 3-931575-77-2 , p. 31-37 .
  5. A little sedition . In: Die Zeit , No. 38/1998.
  6. ^ A b Jürgen Hoffmann / Norbert Lepszy: The DVU in the state parliaments: incompetent, divided, incapable of politics. A record of right-wing extremist politics after ten years . Ed .: Konrad-Adenauer-Stiftung (=  internal study No. 163/1998 ). Sankt Augustin 1998, ISBN 3-931575-77-2 , p. 39-43 .
  7. Jürgen Hoffmann / Norbert Lepszy: The DVU in the state parliaments: incompetent, quarreling, politically incapable, a balance sheet of right-wing extremist politics after ten years . Ed .: Konrad-Adenauer-Stiftung (=  internal study No. 163/1998 ). Sankt Augustin 1998, ISBN 3-931575-77-2 , p. 44-46 .
  8. Tagesspiegel: Merger of NPD and DVU is ineffective.
  9. ^ Legal Tribune Online: LG Munich I No merger between DVU and NPD due to poor coordination.
  10. Looking to the right: opponents of the merger capitulate.
  11. Lower Saxony Ministry of the Interior and Sport (Ed.): Verfassungsschutzbericht 2014 Lower Saxony . Hanover 2015, p. 96 .
  12. Schleswig-Holsteinischer Landtag (ed.): Report of the state government: Verfassungsschutzbericht 2012 (=  Drucksache18 / 77018 ). April 23, 2013, p. 29 .