Peter Trapp

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Peter Trapp (born June 20, 1947 in Berlin ) is a Berlin politician ( CDU ) and has been a member of the Berlin House of Representatives since 1999 .

Life and study

After secondary school, Peter Trapp attended technical college and then completed an apprenticeship as an industrial clerk from 1963 to 1966 . From 1966 to 1968 he was a commercial clerk at Siemens AG .

In 1968 he switched to civil service and became a police officer. From 1971 he worked for the criminal police in Berlin. During this time he studied at the University of Applied Sciences for Administration and Justice , which he completed in 1981 with a degree in administrative management (FH).

Since 1989 he has also been a member of the staff council at Directorate 2 and since 1997 chairman of the general staff council of the Berlin police.

With his election to the Berlin House of Representatives, Trapp's official status was initially suspended . Meanwhile, he was considered having reached the age limit Kriminalhauptkommissar in the retirement staggered.

politics

Peter Trapp joined the CDU in 1987 and is a member of the Klosterfelde local association ( Spandau district ) and chairman of the Berlin CDU's police working group.

Since November 1999 Peter Trapp has represented the constituency Spandau 5 with the districts Pichelsdorf , Gatow , Kladow and southern Wilhelmstadt in the Berlin House of Representatives . There he is chairman of the committee for home affairs, security and order, as well as a simple member of its sub-committee for data protection and freedom of information. In the 2006 election , he won a direct mandate for the House of Representatives with 42.3% of the votes in the constituency Spandau 5.

Views

Trapp attracted nationwide attention with the demand to look more closely at the benefits for Germany among immigrants: “We have to define criteria for immigration that are really useful to our state. In addition to good vocational training and technical qualifications, intelligence must also be the benchmark. I am in favor of intelligence tests on immigrants. "

Trapp received wide criticism for his demands. The government spokesman Christoph Steegmans (FDP) described the idea as “absurd” and “not characterized by any particular intelligence”. The integration commissioner of the federal government, Maria Böhmer (CDU), spoke of an "absurd and discriminatory proposal". Berlin's Governing Mayor Klaus Wowereit (SPD) said that the move testifies to a discriminatory image of human beings and casts a “deterrent light” on the thoughts of individual politicians .

Honors

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Spiegel Online (June 28, 2010; Accessed June 28, 2010)