Ingrid Stahmer

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Ingrid Stahmer (born September 16, 1942 in Mittersill , Austria ) is a former German politician ( SPD ).

Life

After graduating from high school in Bremen in 1962, she joined the SPD in 1964. In 1966 she completed her training as a social worker. From 1971 she worked in the Berlin Senate Department for Family, Youth and Sport, as head of daycare supervision. Senator Ilse Reichel-Koß (SPD) was her great political role model, who also encouraged her to take on greater political responsibility.

Public offices

In 1981 she became city ​​councilor for social affairs and deputy district mayor in Berlin-Charlottenburg . She held these offices until the elections to the Berlin House of Representatives on January 29, 1989 .

Subsequently, on March 16, 1989, she was appointed Senator for Social Affairs and Health and Mayor of the Senate of the new Governing Mayor Walter Momper .

After Anne Klein resigned on November 19, 1990, Stahmer also took over the management responsibility for women, youth and family until the Berlin election in 1990 and the subsequent formation of the grand coalition under Eberhard Diepgen ( CDU ) in January 1991.

In this new coalition, she remained Senator for Social Affairs. In 1994 she also took over the youth and family division of Senator Thomas Krüger, who had moved to the Bundestag .

After the Berlin election in 1995, she moved to the Senate Department for Schools, Youth and Sports, where she worked until 1999.

Top candidacy 1995

For the parliamentary elections in 1995 , she successfully applied for the top candidate of the Berlin SPD and won against the former governing mayor Momper within the party.

Your election campaign was accompanied by several mishaps and disagreements within the Berlin SPD and also took place at the height of the internal party quarrels about the SPD federal chairman Rudolf Scharping .

Their electoral defeat (23.6% of the vote for the SPD versus 37.4% for the CDU) was therefore expected by many political observers. Nevertheless, after the new edition of the grand coalition after the election, she remained a senator, but switched to the school, youth and sport department. She was unable to enforce her claim to be appointed mayor to Diepgen's deputy.

After the 1999 election she withdrew from politics and now works as a trainer for group and organizational dynamics.

Senates

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