Gerda Gühlk

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Gerda Gühlk (born May 11, 1920 in Butzbach , Hesse; † December 16, 2003 ) was a German politician and member of the Hamburg Parliament for the SPD .

Life

Memorial stone in the women's garden

Gerda Gühlk joined the SPD in 1920. She exercised various functions in her party before moving into the Hamburg parliament as a member of parliament from 1966 to 1970. Her term of office in the following electoral term began with a delay: in May 1970, she replaced the MP Dieter Blötz , who had resigned his mandate for a position in the Federal Intelligence Service .

At the time of her election to the after-work parliament, Gerda Gühlk had four children aged twenty-five, twenty-four, twelve and seven years old. In the citizenry, she mainly worked on the revision of the Hamburg building regulations and in the areas of budget policy and criminal law reform. She rated the initiative to lift the statute of limitations for murder (the criminal liability remains intact) as a legislative proposal for the Bundestag as a political success .

On June 9, 1971, she resigned as a member of parliament for family reasons and no longer performed any public duties.

For them there is a memorial stone in the women's garden at the Ohlsdorf cemetery in Hamburg.

literature

  • Inge Grolle and Rita Bake : "I practiced juggling with three balls." Women in the Hamburg citizenship 1946 to 1993. Published by the State Center for Civic Education Hamburg, Dölling and Galitz, Hamburg 1995, ISBN 3-930802-01-5 , P. 344f.

Individual evidence

  1. Stones of Memory : Gerda Gühlk