Philipp Mißfelder

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Philipp Mißfelder
Member of the Bundestag
Incumbent
Assumed office
2005
Personal details
Born (1979-08-25) August 25, 1979
Gelsenkirchen, Northrhine-Westphalia
Nationality  Germany
Political party Christian Democratic Union
Alma mater Technical University of Berlin
Profession Historian
Website www.philipp-missfelder.de

Philipp Mißfelder (born August 25, 1979 in Gelsenkirchen, Northrhine-Westphalia) is a German politician and a member of the German Bundestag.[1] As of January 9, 2014, he serves in the German government as the Coordinator for Transatlantic Cooperation in the Field of Intersocietal Relations, Cultural and Information Policy.[2]

Life

Training

After receiving his secondary school certificate in 1999, Mißfelder served briefly in the German military. He began studying law in 2000 but changed his course of study to history at the Technische_Universität_Berlin in 2003. He finished his studies in 2008 while serving in the Bundestag.[3]

Party Activities

Mißfelder joined the Junge Union (JU) in 1993 and the Christian Democratic Union in 1995 and was head of the offshoot Schüler Union from 1998 to 2000. He has been on the CDU's board of directors since 1999 and was voted onto the Junge Union's board of directors in 2002.

Since 2002 Mißfelder has co-chaired a party working group dedicated to improving relations between younger and older citizens. He has been an elected member of the CDU's leadership council, known as the Präsidium, since 2008, and is its youngest member.[4]

German Bundestag

Mißfelder has been a member of the German Bundestag since 2005, but was not directly voted in, instead entering through his party's Landesliste system, which allows some party members to join the parliament even if not directly elected. He currently the CDU/CSU foreign policy spokesman in the Bundestag and a member of the Bundestag's foreign relations committee.

Other Activities

Since 2006 Mißfelder has been a member of the Konrad Adenauer Stiftung and is in the Bundestag's European Union parliamentary group.[5] He serves as a deputy member of the Haus der Geschichte Foundation in Bonn. Additionally, Mißfelder is on the German-British Society's Königswinter Conference steering and Executive Committee of the German Council on Foreign Relations (DGAP), among other engagements. In June 2013 he was appointed to the board of directors of the Atlantik-Brücke e.V transatlantic network.[6] Mißfelder has been married since 2006 and has two daughters. He is Roman Catholic.

Political Positions

Within the CDU

In the Christian Democratic Union, Mißfelder is known for launching discussions about the party's conservative roots. In 2007 he played a key role in forming the CDU's Einstein Connection, an internal group which aims to reinforce conservatism within the party.

Mißfelder was a key defender of party member Karl-Theodor zu Guttenberg, the German defense minister who was forced to resign his office after a scandal, calling internal criticism of Guttenberg "offensive."[7]

Domestic Politics

Mißfelder is known for his outspoken positions on social and fiscal issues. He gained international attention in 2003 when he said, "I take no stock in 85-year-old people getting hip replacements paid by social welfare".[8] The statement led to demands that he resign from party organs and helped launch a debate over the failing German social welfare system. A similar controversy arose in February 2009 after Mißfelder asserted that a social welfare increase would essentially be a subsidy to the cigarette and liquor industry.[9]

Mißfelder is on-record saying that the German retirement age of 67 should be increased to 70.[10] Additionally he has argued that German healthcare funding reforms are putting too much of a strain on the younger generation. He voted against the 2008 German healthcare funding reform in the Bundestag, calling it "neither intergenerationally just, nor appropriate for the older generation."[11]

He took a hard line against G8 protestors in Germany, comparing them to the demobilized domestic terror organization, the Red Army Faction.[12]

Foreign Politics

An influential voice on German foreign affairs, Mißfelder has spoken out against the possible entry of Turkey into the European Union but has supported UN actions in Libya, despite strong internal opposition within Germany.[13]

He strongly criticized famed German author Günter Grass when the latter controversially wrote a poem largely interpreted as being critical of Israel. [14]

After it was revealed that the US government was able to intercept encrypted communications from Smartphones, Mißfelder declared that the situation was not one for politicians to engage in, but instead "is a topic between the American government, the NSA and the producers (of the phones).[15][16]

In March 2013, Mißfelder praised former German chancellor Gerhard Schröder for speaking out against the war in Iraq.[17]

References

    This article incorporates information from the German Wikipedia.
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