FDP federal party conference 1993

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Coordinates: 51 ° 56 ′ 53 ″  N , 7 ° 38 ′ 16 ″  E

FdpLogoalt.jpg
title 44th Ordinary Federal Party Congress
Serial number 44
place Muenster
state North Rhine-Westphalia
Hall Hall Münsterland
Beginning June 11, 1993
Duration (in days) 3
Delegates 662

The Federal Congress of the FDP in 1993 held the FDP from 11 to 13 June 1993 Münster from. It was the 44th ordinary federal party conference of the FDP in the Federal Republic of Germany . The party conference took place in the Halle Münsterland .

decisions

The party congress passed resolutions and adopted papers on the subjects of "Securing peace in the world - shaping the future of Germany", "Tolerance shows in action - liberals against violence", "Ensuring internal security. Fight Crime ", to secure the future of Germany as a business location, to reduce costs in housing construction , to supply housing in the new federal states, to release for adoption , to the judgment of the Federal Constitutional Court on the Pregnancy and Family Assistance Act , to education policy , to internal security , to the" role of Germany in of a changed world ”and to the so-called care compromise.

Delegate key

A total of 662 delegates were invited to the federal party conference . According to the membership of the regional associations as of December 31, 1992 (330 delegates) and the number of votes (330 delegates) in the Bundestag election of December 2, 1990 , the regional associations stood for the term of office of the delegates, which began on May 1, 1993 and ended on April 30, 1995 ended up having the following delegate rights. The calculation in the federal office was carried out by the federal manager Rolf Berndt on January 18, 1993 and was communicated to the regional associations.

According to the membership of the regional associations and the votes, the following delegate key resulted:

Delegate rights to the federal party congress
Regional association Delegates according to the number of members Delegates by voter vote total Before
Baden-Württemberg 7.117 23 667.272 43 66 57
Bavaria 5,890 19th 551,892 35 54 47
Berlin 4,260 13 183,780 12 25th 25th
Brandenburg 5,177 16 138,586 9 25th 38
Bremen 624 2 50,630 3 5 4th
Hamburg 1,868 6th 117.293 8th 14th 12
Hesse 7,484 24 374.240 24 48 38
Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania 5,826 19th 91,229 6th 25th 30th
Lower Saxony 8,056 26th 474,609 31 57 46
North Rhine-Westphalia 20,017 64 1,118,967 72 136 110
Rhineland-Palatinate 5,200 17th 245.283 16 33 26th
Saarland 2,588 8th 42,459 3 11 8th
Saxony 9,666 31 345,471 22nd 53 69
Saxony-Anhalt 8,394 27 314.265 20th 47 65
Schleswig-Holstein 3,179 10 185,636 12 22nd 18th
Thuringia 7,841 25th 221,621 14th 39 67
Federal territory 103.187 330 5,123,233 330 660 660
Foreign group Europe 2 2 2

Federal Executive

Klaus Kinkel (1981)

The new chairman Klaus Kinkel was elected with 545 of 622 votes and 57 against.

After the new election in 1993, the federal executive board included:

Chairman Klaus Kinkel
vice-chairman Irmgard Schwaetzer , Rainer Ortleb , Wolfgang Gerhardt
Treasurer Hermann Otto Solms
Assessor in the Presidium Carola von Braun , Walter Hirche , Joachim Günther
Secretary General Werner Hoyer
Assessor in the federal board Rainer Brüderle , Gerhart Baum , Peter Caesar , Harald Cronauer , Stefan Diekwisch , Konrad Felber , Olaf Feldmann , Walter Goldbeck , Martin Hildebrandt , Burkhard Hirsch , Birgit Homburger , Ulrich Irmer , Andreas Kniepert , Wolfgang Knoll , Roland Kohn , Peter Kunert , Sabine Leutheusser -Schnarrenberger , Uwe Lühr , Bruno Menzel , Jürgen W. Möllemann , Hans-Joachim Otto , Detlev Paepke , Ludwig Martin Rade , Günter Rexrodt , Manfred Richter , Achim Rohde , Uwe Ronneburger , Max Stadler , Robert Vogel , Ruth Wagner , Christiane Weisheit , Guido Westerwelle , Uta Würfel
Honorary Chairwoman Walter Scheel , Hans-Dietrich Genscher

See also

Web links

Wiktionary: Federal Party Congress  - explanations of meanings, word origins, synonyms, translations

literature

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Based on documents from the archive of liberalism of the Friedrich Naumann Foundation for Freedom in Gummersbach .
  2. ^ Free democratic correspondence , special edition, June 17, 1993.