Liselotte Pieser

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Liselotte Pieser (born December 30, 1917 in Beierfeld ; † November 24, 1998 ) was a German economist and politician ( CDU ).

Life and work

Pieser, a qualified economist, worked from 1945 to 1951 as a teacher at a primary school in Bad Gottleuba and at a business school in Pirna . In 1951 she fled to West Berlin and settled in Berlin-Nikolassee . She entered the federal service in 1952, since 1955 she worked as an assistant and head of department in the Federal Ministry for all-German issues and worked primarily in the cultural and socio-political area. In 1959 she was taken on as a civil servant, then finally promoted to government director.

Political party

In 1945, Pieser was one of the founders of the CDU in Bad Gottleuba. She was deputy chairwoman of the women's association of the CDU Berlin and was elected deputy chairwoman of the women's association at the federal level in 1969. From 1964 to 1967 she was a member of the CDU federal executive committee .

MPs

From 1946 to 1949 Pieser was a member of the district council of the Pirna district . She belonged to the German Bundestag from June 26, 1968, when she replaced the retired MP Josef Stingl , until 1980. She had moved into parliament as a West Berlin member and from April 9, 1975 to 1980 she was the deputy chairwoman of the Audit Committee.

Honors

literature