Martin Müller (politician, 1937)

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Martin Müller (* 1937 in Hildesheim ; † June 27, 1991 ) was a German politician ( CDU ), political scientist and professional soldier . From 1982 to 1991 he was a member of the Hamburg parliament . He was senior scientific director at the command academy of the Bundeswehr .

Live and act

After Martin Müller graduated from high school in 1958, he did basic military service and studied law in Göttingen from 1959 . In 1962 he joined the Bundeswehr and became a professional soldier. From 1969 to 1971 he completed general staff training and at the same time studied political science at the University of Hamburg . There he graduated in 1973 with a diploma thesis on freedom and commitment of the MPs using the example of faction changers in the 6th German Bundestag . After completing his training, he worked, among other things, as a research assistant at the University of the Federal Armed Forces in Hamburg and a lecturer at the command and control academy of the Federal Armed Forces . In 1986 he received his doctorate from the Free University of Berlin with a dissertation on politics and bureaucracy. The MBFR policy of the Federal Republic of Germany between 1967 and 1973 . From 1987 he headed the social sciences department at the Bundeswehr Leadership Academy.

Müller was a member of the CDU. In 1978 he was elected district chairman of Altona / Elbe suburbs. In the election in June 1982 he won a mandate for the Hamburg citizenship for the first time. Müller, who at that time assumed the rank of lieutenant colonel , was given leave of absence by the Bundeswehr for his work in the state parliament. He belonged to the citizenry from the 10th to the 13th legislative period . There he worked, among other things, as security and domestic policy spokesman for the CDU. However, he was best known as the social policy spokesman for his parliamentary group, so the Senate first presented a poverty report on his initiative in 1991.

In 1991 Martin Müller died of cancer. He was married and had three children.

Publications

  • Freedom and commitment of the MPs using the example of the faction changers in the 6th German Bundestag. Hamburg 1973.
  • Change of faction in the party state: Parliamentary reform and political culture in the Federal Republic of Germany. Volume 21 of studies on social science, Westdeutscher Verlag, Opladen 1974, ISBN 3-531-11261-9 .
  • Role and self-image of the opposition. In: Manfred Asendorf (ed.): History of the Hamburg citizenship. Frölich and Kaufmann, Berlin 1984, ISBN 3-88725-164-4 , p. 162.
  • Politics and bureaucracy. The MBFR policy of the Federal Republic of Germany between 1967 and 1973. Nomos-Verlagsgesellschaft, Baden-Baden 1988, ISBN 3-7890-1534-2 .
  • German Unity and European Security: A Critique of the ISFH Study. Section for Social Sciences, Bundeswehr Leadership Academy, Hamburg 1990.
  • with Volker Matthies: The structural change in the international system, European security and the future functions of the armed forces. Section for Social Sciences, Bundeswehr Leadership Academy, Hamburg 1990.
  • with Katrin Börsting: Candidate list and internal party decision-making using the example of the Hamburg CDU. In: Jürgen Hartmann (Hrsg.), Uwe Thaysen (Hrsg.): Pluralism and parliamentarism in theory and practice. Winfried Steffani on his 65th birthday. Westdeutscher Verlag, Opladen 1992, ISBN 3-531-12326-2 , pp. 137-173.

literature

  • Dr. Müller, Martin In: Handbook of the Hamburg citizenship: Personalalien. Election period 13th 1987. Citizenship, Hamburg 1987, pp. 227–228.
  • Müller, Martin. In: Jürgen Hartmann (Hrsg.), Uwe Thaysen (Hrsg.): Pluralism and parliamentarism in theory and practice. Winfried Steffani on his 65th birthday. Westdeutscher Verlag, Opladen 1992, ISBN 3-531-12326-2 , p. 419.

Individual evidence

  1. a b Dr. Müller, Martin In: Handbook of the Hamburg citizenship. 1987.
  2. ^ "Attorney of the Poor" , in Hamburger Abendblatt of June 29, 1991, accessed on February 16, 2020.
  3. Hamburgers said goodbye to Martin Müller. A courageous and encouraging person. , in Hamburger Abendblatt on July 9, 1991, accessed on April 8, 2015.