Gisela Müller-Wolff

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Gisela Müller-Wolff (born February 2, 1922 in Swinoujscie ; † November 22, 2000 in Bremen ) was a German economist and politician ( SPD ).

biography

education and profession

Wolff studied after high school from 1940 to 1944 economics at the University of Greifswald , the University of Heidelberg and the University of Breslau , graduating as Dipl. economist from. During the war she was expelled to Berlin and worked in several companies. Since 1951 she lived in Bremen. In 1951 she became a government councilor, later senior government councilor, head of the pricing office at the Senator for Economics and Foreign Trade. In 1957 she was also acting head of the office for physical exercise. After her citizenship period, she returned to the Senator for Economic Affairs as a government director in 1971. Müller-Wolff was married to the mayor Wolfgang Müller and has called himself Müller-Wolff ever since

politics

Wolff became a member of the SPD in 1947. She was a member of the SPD working group for women.

From October 1955 to July 7, 1971 she was a member of the Bremen citizenship for 16 years . Here she was, among other things in the financial deputation and active in the Budget Committee. On October 9, 1967, at the suggestion of Mayor Hans Koschnick (SPD), she became deputy chairwoman of the SPD parliamentary group; The chairman was Richard Boljahn at that time and Gustav Böhrnsen from 1968 . In 1968 she defended against Finance Senator Rolf Speckmann (FDP) the parliamentary right to deal with the budget in the citizenry. After conflicts with the parliamentary group, she resigned on January 19, 1971 and resigned her seat in June 1971, shortly before the end of the legislative period.

Other offices

In 1960, Müller-Wolff succeeded Anna Stiegler (SPD) as chairwoman of the Bremen Women's Committee . She was an important woman in the Bremen women's movement .

Honors

Fonts

literature