Klaus Huebner

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Klaus Huebner (born June 19, 1924 in Berlin-Wedding ) is a German former politician (formerly SPD ) and police officer . From 1965 to 1969 he was a member of the German Bundestag and then until 1987 Police President in West Berlin .

Life and work

Hübner was born the son of a lathe operator . After attending elementary school , he completed a commercial training with an insurance company from 1938 to 1942. He then took part in the Second World War as a soldier until 1945 and was employed as a pilot in the Air Force .

Hübner worked from 1945 to 1948 as a worker in the construction and transport industry before he switched to the police service in 1949 . He initially worked as a police officer in Berlin , took up a job as a trade union secretary in 1951 and acted from 1953 to 1968 as federal manager of the police union (GdP) in Düsseldorf . At the same time, he was secretary of the International Association of Police Unions (UISP) from 1964 to 1968.

From 1969 to 1987 he was police chief in Berlin. In this function he was chairman of the working group of police presidents of the Federal Republic of Germany from 1986 to 1988. He was also a founding member of the White Ring in 1976 .

Political party

Hübner joined the SPD in 1952 and was chairman of the SPD sub-district Grevenbroich from 1962 to 1966 . In 2002 he resigned from the SPD in protest against the formation of the red-red government coalition in Berlin .

MP

Hübner was a council member of the Nievenheim community from 1961 to 1968 . It belonged to the German Bundestag from May 13, 1965, when he replaced the deceased MP Rudolf-Ernst Heiland , until 1965, and from December 6, 1966, when he replaced the deceased MP Wenzel Jaksch , until his resignation on January 14 1969 on. He entered parliament in both election terms via the state list of the SPD North Rhine-Westphalia .

Public offices

Hübner had been mayor of the Nievenheim office since 1964.

Honors

literature