- Philipp Jenninger
Philipp-Hariolf Jenninger (born
10 June 1932 ) is a German politician of the CDU. He served asPresident of the Bundestag from 1984 to 1988, when he resigned after protests related to his speech commemorating the anniversary ofKristallnacht .Life and ministerial career
Jenninger was born in 1932 in Rindelbach, now a part of
Ellwangen . He studied law at theUniversity of Tübingen , obtaining a doctoral degree in 1957 with a dissertation titled "Die Reformbedürftigkeit des Bundesverfassungsgerichts" (The necessity of reform of the Federal Constitutional Court) and passing the state examination in 1959. In 1960, he started working in theBundeswehr administration inStuttgart . He became an assistant in the Federal Ministry of Defense and later personal assistant and press contact of Federal Minister for the Affairs of the Defence CouncilHeinrich Krone . After the dissolution of this ministry, he worked from 1966 to 1969 as political assistant of Federal Minister of FinanceFranz Josef Strauß .Between 1982 and 1984, Jenninger was
Staatsminister in theGerman Chancellery , assisting ChancellorHelmut Kohl .Bundestag membership and presidency
Jenninger was a member of the
Bundestag from 1969 to 1990, always as directly elected representant of a constituency. At first, he representedCrailsheim ; after 1976, he representedSchwäbisch Hall .After
Rainer Barzel 's resignation, Jenninger was electedPresident of the Bundestag on5 November 1984 . As President, he made a controversial speech in a special session on10 November 1988 commemorating the 50th anniversary of Kristallnacht. Jenninger tried to explain the reasons behind German enthusiasm for National Socialism in the 1930s. His speech was presented badly (by his own later admission), as his way of speaking allowed the interpretation that Jenninger didn't sufficiently dissociate himself from the Nazi ideas he referred to, making it hard to distinguish what were his own ideas and what were the "fascinating" (as Jenninger said) Nazi ideas he was just reporting.American Jewish Committee , " [http://ajcarchives.org/AJC_DATA/Files/1990_9_CentralEurope.pdf American Jewish Yearbook Vol. 90] ", 1990, p. 358.] More than 50 members of parliament walked out during their President's speech in protest.The New York Times ,November 13 1988 , [http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=940DE3DD173EF930A25752C1A96E948260 Storm of Protest] .] This caused a political storm, and Jenninger resigned his Bundestag presidency on 11 November. He did not stand for reelection as a Bundestag member in the 1990 elections. One year after the incident, Jewish community leaderIgnatz Bubis , who later became chairman of theZentralrat der Juden in Deutschland , used several passages of Jenninger's speech verbatim (although he didn't use the word "fascinating"), demonstrating that the content of Jenninger's speech had not been wrong, just his performance of it.Peter Schmalz, " [http://www.welt.de/data/1995/12/01/703954.html "Keiner hat etwas gemerkt"] , "Die Welt ",1 December 1995 . de icon]Jenninger later became a diplomat and worked as the German ambassador in
Vienna ,Austria from 1991 to 1995, and as ambassador to theHoly See from 1995 to 1997.References
Literature about Jenningers Speech
*
Jeffrey Herf : "Philipp Jenninger and the Dangers of Speaking Clearly." Partisan Rewiew 56 (1989): 225-236.Literature
Michael F. Feldkamp (ed.), "Der Bundestagspräsident. Amt - Funktion - Person." 16. Wahlperiode, München 2007, ISBN 978-3-7892-8201-0External links
*PND|11886646X
* [http://www.bundestag.de/parlament/praesidium/btpraes/jenninger.html Biography] at the Bundestag website de icon
* [http://www.mediaculture-online.de/Politische_oeffentliche_Reden.813+M5a5246f6814.0.html Complete text of Jenninger's speech] , also as audio version de iconPersondata
NAME=Jenninger, Philipp-Hariolf
ALTERNATIVE NAMES=Jenninger, Philipp
SHORT DESCRIPTION=German politician and diplomat, former President of the Bundestag
DATE OF BIRTH=10 June 1932
PLACE OF BIRTH=Rindelbach (Ellwangen,Germany )
DATE OF DEATH=
PLACE OF DEATH=
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