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Bernd Siebert

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Bernd Siebert
NameBernd Siebert
Birth date1939
Birth placeGudensberg, Hesse, Germany
OccupationPolitician
PartyChristian Democratic Union
NationalityGerman

Bernd Siebert (born 1939) is a German politician associated with the Christian Democratic Union (Germany). He served as a member of the Bundestag representing constituencies in Hesse and was active in federal legislative affairs, party organization, and parliamentary committees during the late 20th and early 21st centuries. Siebert's career intersected with figures and events across German reunification, European integration, and debates over social and fiscal policy within the Federal Republic of Germany.

Early life and education

Siebert was born in Gudensberg in the state of Hesse and grew up in post‑war Germany. He completed secondary schooling in Hesse and pursued technical and commercial training linked to regional industry in Kassel. During his formative years he encountered the reconstruction-era politics of the Christian Democratic Union (Germany), the social market economics promoted by Konrad Adenauer, and regional debates shaped by the North Rhine-Westphalia industrial belt and the administrative reforms of the Federal Republic of Germany (1949–present). His education included vocational qualifications and studies that connected him to municipal administration in Hesse and to professional networks in Chamber of Commerce and Industry circles and local party associations.

Political career

Siebert joined the Christian Democratic Union (Germany) and advanced through municipal and district party structures in Hesse, engaging with elected bodies at the local level such as city councils and district assemblies influenced by the political culture of Hesse. He later won election to the Bundestag, where he represented Hesse constituencies in successive federal legislatures, participating in the parliamentary groups of the CDU/CSU. During his tenure he worked alongside notable CDU politicians including Helmut Kohl, Wolfgang Schäuble, Angela Merkel, Hans-Dietrich Genscher (in cross-party interactions), and counterparts from other parties such as the SPD, the FDP, and the Alliance 90/The Greens. Siebert's parliamentary career spanned eras marked by the fall of the Berlin Wall, German reunification, and expanding roles for Germany in the European Union.

Legislative work and policy positions

In legislative debates, Siebert contributed to policy areas shaped by national fiscal frameworks and social policies, engaging with legislation debated by parliamentary committees and plenary sessions presided over in the Bundestag chamber. He articulated positions consistent with CDU priorities, aligning with leaders such as Helmut Kohl on reunification policies and with later CDU/CSU stances on European integration advocated by figures like Wolfgang Schäuble and Angela Merkel. Siebert addressed issues that intersected with federal institutions such as the Federal Ministry of Finance and the Federal Ministry of Labour and Social Affairs while interacting with interest groups including the Confederation of German Employers' Associations and the Deutscher Gewerkschaftsbund. He also engaged with international parliamentary networks and policy dialogues involving the European Parliament, the Council of Europe, and bilateral delegations to countries represented by the German Embassy network.

Committee memberships and parliamentary roles

Throughout his Bundestag service, Siebert held committee assignments that placed him in deliberations with members of the Committee on Budget and committees overseeing social and regional development matters, often collaborating with committee chairs from the CDU/CSU and opposition parties such as the SPD. He participated in parliamentary groups and working teams responsible for drafting motions, negotiating coalition agreements involving the CDU/CSU and potential partners like the FDP or grand coalition partners in the SPD. Siebert also served in delegation roles that engaged with interparliamentary assemblies such as the Interparliamentary Union and bilateral groups that met with delegations from countries including France, Poland, and the United States.

Electoral history

Siebert contested constituency elections in Hesse, securing direct mandates or list places to enter the Bundestag across multiple federal election cycles conducted by the Federal Returning Officer (Germany). His campaigns reflected CDU electoral strategies coordinated with the CDU state associations and local party organizations in Hesse, facing opponents from the SPD, the Greens, and the FDP. Electoral contests in constituencies such as those around Kassel and Schwalm-Eder-Kreis mirrored broader national trends in Bundestag elections that involved coalition negotiations, vote share shifts, and regional voting behavior tied to economic conditions in Hesse.

Personal life and honours

Outside parliament, Siebert maintained connections to civic institutions and local associations in Hesse, including municipal bodies, volunteer organizations, and regional cultural institutions such as museums or foundations tied to Hessian heritage and the postwar rebuilding period. He received recognitions commonly awarded to long-serving parliamentarians and public figures, comparable to honors bestowed by state authorities like the State of Hesse and national orders associated with service in the Federal Republic of Germany (1949–present). Siebert's personal network included colleagues from the Christian Democratic Union (Germany), municipal leaders in Kassel and Gudensberg, and contemporaries involved in federal legislative history and party organization.

Category:Members of the Bundestag Category:Christian Democratic Union of Germany politicians Category:People from Hesse