Willy Brandt
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Willy Brandt was a German chancellor from 1969 until 1974. He was born Herbert Ernst Karl Frahm on December 18th, 1913 in Lübeck Germany. He was the leader of the Social Democratic Party of Germany (1964 – 1987 and winner of the Nobel Peace Prize (1971). He died on October 8th, 1992 in Unkel at the Rhine.
[edit] Biography
He was born as son of Martha Frahm and John Möller in 1913 in Lübeck. He never met his father and grewed up with his mother and his grandfather.
He flew to Norway when the Nazis took over government in Germany. He lead a contact office for the resistence against the Nazi regime. After he lost his German citizenship, he became Norwegian. The Germans arrested him when they occupied Norway. They believed he would become Norwegian soldier and let him go free. He fled to Sweden. In 1945, Brandt returned to Germany as writer for Scandinavian newspapers.
He was married three times:
- Carlotta Thorkildsen - 1940 to 1948
- Rut (Hansen) Bergaust - 1948 to 1980
- Ruth Seebacher - 1983 to 1992
[edit] Political Life
His political carrer started in 1948. He became a representative for the SPD in the Bundestag for a district of Berlin. He was member of the state parliament of Berlin from 1950 until 1971.
He became president of the Parliament of Berlin (1955) and Mayor of Berlin (1957). Willy Brandt started to campain for the position as Chancellor (Bundeskanzler) for the Social Democrats (SPD) in 1961. In 1966, he became Vice-Chancellor of the Grat Coalition of SPD and the Christian Democratic Union of Germany (CDU) under Chancellor Kurt Georg Kiesinger. He started the social-liberal coalition between the SPD and the Free Democratic Party of Germany (FDP). Willy Brandt became Chancellor in 1969.
He made many changes in several political areas. For example:
- Society politics
- New divorce laws
- Right of vote was made 18 instead of 21
- Easier to be declared a Conscientious objector
- Educaton politics
- No study fees
- Financial aid for poor students
- Opened more universities
- Foreign politics
- The New Eastern Politics of Western Germany.
He travelled to East Germany, Warsaw and Moscow to improve relationships. His acceptance the Oder-Neisse Line and many of controversies in the Parliament and society followed.
In 1971, he got the Nobel Prize for Peace for his politics.
In 1972, Rainer Barzel of the CDU believed he could end the Brandt administration, but he failed. Brandt was re-elected to a second chancellorship that year. In 1974, the affair of the spy Günther Guillaume forced the end of his reign. Helmut Schmidt became chancellor.
Brandt was still leader of the SPD. He later of the Socialist International also. He was member of the European Parliament from 1978 to 1983. He gave up the position as chief of the SPD in 1987.