- Renate Schmidt
Renate Schmidt (née Pokorny, born
December 12 1943 inHanau ) is a German Social Democratic politician.Early life
Schmidt grew up in Coburg,
Fürth , andNuremberg . Due to a pregnancy at the age of 17, she was forced to leave school a year before she would have received herAbitur . Her future husband, Gerhard Schmidt (died 1984), with the assistance of both their families, supported her in raising the child while he attended university. In 1963 and 1970, she bore two more children. In 1974 her husband gave up his work as an architect, as her salary was bigger than his. Unusually for those times, he took charge of the household and cared for the children.Labor and Political career
Having worked at
Quelle AG for quite a while, Schmidt was elected to the company'sworks council in 1972; she was not required to work from 1973 to 1980, because of this. From 1980 to 1988, she was theBavaria n state chairman of thelabor union HBV (Gewerkschaft Handel, Banken und Versicherungen ; En: "Labor Union Trade, Banks and Insurances").Schmidt joined the SPD in 1972. In 1973, she and her husband founded a local chapter of the SPD youth organization. In 1980, she was elected to the
Bundestag . From 1987 to 1990, she was deputy chairman of SPD-"Fraktion" in the Bundestag; from 1990 to 1994, she was Vice-President of the Bundestag.In 1999, she announced she would retire from politics; this retirement ended, however, in 2002, and since
October 22 of the same year she has been Federal Minister for Family Affairs, Senior Citizens, Women and Youth. After theGrand Coalition took over power in 2005, she was discharged from her office and replaced byUrsula von der Leyen .Books
*de iconRenate Schmidt: "Was ich will" Im Gespräch mit Manfred E. Berger , ECON Verlag, 1994
*de iconRenate Schmidt: Mut zur Menschlichkeit, ECON Verlag, 1995
*de iconRenate Schmidt: SOS Familie. Ohne Kinder sehen wir alt aus, Rowohlt Verlag, 2002External links
* [http://www.renateschmidt.de Renate Schmidt's Homepage]
* [http://www.bmfsfj.de Federal Ministry for Family Affairs, Senior Citizens, Women and Youth (German language)]
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