Manfred Rademacher (politician)

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Manfred Rademacher (born April 19, 1954 in Uelzen (Unna) ) is a German politician ( SPD ).

Life and work

Rademacher completed vocational training as a construction worker and worked in this profession until he graduated as a master for concrete element production in 1985 and became head of the transport department of a concrete plant. Rademacher is the father of three children.

Rademacher has been active on the board of the Märkisch-Oder-Spree district association for the German Red Cross since 1992 .

politics

During the change in the GDR , Rademacher was one of the founders of the SPD local group in Storkow (Mark) on January 11, 1990 . He was elected deputy mayor of Storkow in May 1990 and became head of the city's building department. Rademacher was also chairman of the SPD parliamentary group in the city ​​council of Storkow and in the district council of Beeskow .

In the state elections in Brandenburg in 1990 he was elected to the Brandenburg state parliament as a direct candidate for the SPD in constituency 32 (Beeskow-Frankfurt / Oder II - Eisenhüttenstadt, Land) . In the elections of 1994 and 1999 he managed to be re-elected twice in a row in constituency 32 (Oder-Spree III / Frankfurt / Oder), so that from October 26, 1990 to October 13, 2004 he was a member of the Potsdam state parliament. He was a member of the Legal Affairs Committee throughout, from 1992 to 1994 he was a member of the Committee on Budget and Finance and Vice-Chair of the Committee on Budgetary Control. From 1994 to 2004 he was also a member of the committee for urban development, housing and transport as well as the election review committee. In 1993 and 1994 he was also a member of the parliamentary committee of inquiry examining publicly raised allegations of irregularities in connection with property matters and the award of public contracts.

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Members' letter (PDF file; 1.02 MB), 4th quarter 2009, DRK district association Märkisch-Oder-Spree, p. 4. Accessed on March 7, 2011.
  2. "We wanted to do something" , Märkische Oderzeitung from March 6, 2010. Retrieved on March 5, 2011.

Web links