Federal Ministry of Labour and Social Affairs

Federal Ministry of Labour and Social Affairs
Agency overview
Formed 1919 (Weimar Republic),
1949 (West Germany)
Jurisdiction Government of Germany
Headquarters Wilhelmstraße 49
10117 Berlin
Minister responsible
Website http://www.bmas.de
Main Entrance on Wilhelmstrasse

The Federal Ministry for Labour and Social Affairs (BMAS)[1] is a federal ministry of the Federal Republic of Germany headed by the Federal Minister of Labour and Social Affairs as a member of the Cabinet of Germany (Bundesregierung). Its first location is on Wilhelmstrasse in Berlin, the second in Bonn.

History

The Reich Ministry of Labour of the Weimar Republic was established on 13 February 1919 as the successor of the Labour Office (Reichsarbeitsamt) of the German Empire. The Social Democratic politician Gustav Bauer became the first Minister for Labour under Chancellor Philipp Scheidemann, whom he succeeded on June 21 of the same year. On the day of the Machtergreifung in January 1933, the German National politician and Stahlhelm leader Franz Seldte was appointed Minister for Labour in the Cabinet Hitler, a position he officially held until 1945, though without actual power.

The West German Ministry for Labour was re-established in Bonn on 20 September 1949 with the Cabinet Adenauer I. According to the 1991 Berlin/Bonn Act it moved to its present seat in Berlin-Mitte in 2000, on premises formerly used by Goebbels' Propaganda Ministry and the East German National Front organisation.

During the Cabinet Schröder II from 2002 to 2005, the ministry had been dissolved and its responsibilities allocated to the Federal Ministry for Economics and Labour[2] and the Federal Ministry of Health and Social Security. Responsibilities were re-allocated once again when a new government was formed under Chancellor Angela Merkel following the Bundestag elections of 2005. The German name was changed from Bundesministerium für Arbeit und Sozialordnung to Bundesministerium für Arbeit und Soziales.

Ministers

Andrea Nahles

Reich Ministers for Labour

Federal Ministers

Political Party:   CDU   SPD

Name
(Born-Died)
Party Term of Office Chancellor
(Cabinet)
Federal Minister for Labour
Anton Storch
(1892–1975)
CDU 20 September 1949 29 October 1957 Adenauer
(I • II)
Federal Minister for Labour and Social Affairs
Theodor Blank
(1905–1972)
CDU 29 October 1957 26 October 1965 Adenauer (III • IV • V)
Erhard (I)
Hans Katzer
(1919–1996)
CDU 26 October 1965 21 October 1969 Erhard (II)
Kiesinger (I)
Walter Arendt
(1925–2005)
SPD 22 October 1969 16 December 1976 Brandt (III)
Schmidt (I)
Herbert Ehrenberg
(b. 1926)
SPD 16 December 1976 28 April 1982 Schmidt
(II • III)
Heinz Westphal
(1924–1998)
SPD 28 April 1982 1 October 1982 Schmidt
(III)
Norbert Blüm
(b. 1935)
CDU 1 October 1982 27 October 1998 Kohl
(IIIIIIIVV)
Walter Riester
(b. 1943)
SPD 27 October 1998 22 October 2002 Schröder
(I)
Fed.Min. for Economics and Labour 22 October 2002 22 November 2005 Schröder
(II)
Wolfgang Clement
(b. 1940)
SPD
Fed.Min. for Health and Social Security
Ulla Schmidt
(b. 1949)
SPD
Federal Minister for Labour and Social Affairs
Franz Müntefering
(b. 1940)
SPD 22 November 2005 21 November 2007 Merkel
(I)
Olaf Scholz
(b. 1958)
SPD 21 November 2007 28 October 2009
Franz Josef Jung
(b. 1949)
CDU 28 October 2009 27 November 2009 Merkel
(II)
Ursula von der Leyen
(b. 1958)
CDU 30 November 2009 17 December 2013
Andrea Nahles
(b. 1970)
SPD 17 December 2013 Incumbent Merkel
(III)

State secretaries

The Parliamentary Secretary of States are Klaus Brandner and Franz Thönnes.

The Secretaries of State are Detlef Scheele, Franz-Josef Lersch-Mense and Kajo Wasserhövel.[3]

Notes

  1. German name: Bundesministerium für Arbeit und Soziales. Former German name: Bundesministerium für Arbeit und Sozialordnung. The English translation used by the ministry is the same
  2. German name: Bundesministerium für Wirtschaft und Arbeit
  3. as of April 2008
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