Jens Böhrnsen Biography

German politician (born 1949)

Jens Böhrnsen (born 12 June 1949) is a German politician of the SPD who served as President of the Senate and Mayor of Bremen from 2005 to 2015. From 1 November 2009 until 31 October 2010 he was President of the Bundesrat. As such, he was acting head of state of Germany from the resignation of President Horst Köhler on 31 May 2010 until the election of Christian Wulff on 30 June 2010. Böhrnsen resigned in 2015 after his party sustained losses in state parliament election.

Böhrnsen is a lawyer by profession and served as a judge in Bremen from 1978 to 1995, when he became a full-time politician.

Background

Böhrnsen was born on 12 June 1949 in Gröpelingen, then a workers' district of Bremen, to parents active in the Social Democratic Party of Germany (SPD) and labor unions. His father, Gustav Böhrnsen, a communist turned social democrat, was also an SPD politician and served as chairman of the SPD group in the Parliament of Bremen 1968-1971. Jens Böhrnsen joined the SPD in 1967. At the University of Kiel, he studied law, and concluded his studies with the first Staatsexamen in 1973, and the second Staatsexamen in 1977 at the University of Hamburg. He worked as an *essor in Bremen's administration, thereafter as a judge for 17 years, before he was elected to the Parliament of Bremen (Bürgerschaft).

Political career

In 1999, Böhrnsen was elected head of the SPD group of the Parliament of Bremen. On 8 November 2005, Bremen's legislative *embly elected Böhrnsen as mayor after he had won the Social Democrat primary for the office, which had become vacant with the resignation of Henning Scherf. as a mayor and head of senate of Bremen.

Recently, Böhrnsen has been involved in the debate revolving around a modernization of Germany's cons*ution. In the process, he rejected demands for the state of Bremen to merge with Lower Saxony to form a new northern state (a unit within Germany's federal system) — a demand that had been making the rounds as Bremen is not only the smallest German state, but has also been saddled with an extraordinary amount of debt for the past 15 years. After the 2007 state elections, Böhrnsen abandoned the coalition with the Christian Democrats (CDU) and instead started a coalition with the Greens. He is longlisted for the 2008 World Mayor award.

As president of the Senate of Bremen, Böhrnsen was elected President of the German Bundesrat for the year 2009–2010, starting 1 November 2009. This office rotates between the heads of government of the states of Germany following a defined schedule. According to the German cons*ution, the head of the Bundresrat is the designated subs*ute for the President of Germany. When Horst Köhler resigned from the presidency on 31 May 2010, Böhrnsen *umed the functions of head of state of Germany until the election of a successor by a Federal Convention. The successor was Christian Wulff, who *umed office upon his election on 30 June 2010.

After his party lost more than five percentage points in the state election on 10 May 2015, Böhrnsen retired as head of government. His successor was Carsten Sieling.

References

    External links

    • CityMayors profile
    Chancellor of GermanyFederal chairmen
    (since 1946)
    • Kurt Schumacher
    • Erich Ollenhauer
    • Willy Brandt
    • Hans-Jochen Vogel
    • Björn Engholm
    • Rudolf Scharping
    • Oskar Lafontaine
    • Gerhard Schröder
    • Franz Müntefering
    • Matthias Platzeck
    • Kurt Beck
    • Franz Müntefering
    • Sigmar Gabriel
    • Martin Schulz
    • Andrea Nahles
    • Saskia Esken & Norbert Walter-Borjans
    • Saskia Esken & Lars Klingbeil
    Leaders in the
    Bundestag
    • Kurt Schumacher
    • Erich Ollenhauer
    • Fritz Erler
    • Helmut Schmidt
    • Herbert Wehner
    • Hans-Jochen Vogel
    • Hans-Ulrich Klose
    • Rudolf Scharping
    • Peter Struck
    • Ludwig Stiegler
    • Franz Müntefering
    • Peter Struck
    • Frank-Walter Steinmeier
    • Thomas Oppermann
    • Andrea Nahles
    • Rolf Mützenich
    General Secretaries
    (since 1999)
    • Franz Müntefering
    • Olaf Scholz
    • Klaus Uwe Benneter
    • Hubertus Heil
    • Andrea Nahles
    • Yasmin Fahimi
    • Katarina Barley
    • Hubertus Heil
    • Lars Klingbeil
    • Kevin Kühnert
    Governments
    • Kiesinger
    • Brandt (I
    • II)
    • Schmidt (I
    • II
    • III)
    • Schröder (I
    • II)
    • Merkel (I
    • III
    • IV)
    • Scholz
    Affiliated organisations
    • Friedrich Ebert Foundation
    • Jusos
    • German Trade Union Confederation
    • Arbeiter-Samariter-Bund
    • Parlamentarische Linke
    • Seeheimer Kreis
    Related articles
    • Grand coalition
    • Social-liberal coalition
    • Red–green coalition
    • Red–red–green coalition
    • Kenya coalition
    Category
    Jens Böhrnsen