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Professor Horst Köhler (born 22 February 1943) is a German politician and civil servant. The former head of the International Monetary Fund (IMF), he was narrowly elected President of Germany on May 23, 2004 by the Bundesversammlung (National Assembly). His inauguration is set for July 1, 2004.
Biography
Köhler was born in Skierbieszów, in what is now Poland, as the seventh of eight children into a family of Germans from Glückstal in Romanian Bessarabia (now part of Moldova). His parents had left Bessarabia in 1940 during the Nazi-Soviet population transfers that followed the Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact, which awarded Bessarabia to the Soviet Union. As part of the Generalplan Ost colonisation effort, they were later resettled in Skierbieszów, a village in Zamosc County, Eastern Poland in 1942. As the German army retreated from Eastern Europe towards the end of World War II, the Köhler family fled to Leipzig, and in 1953 they fled to Ludwigsburg in Baden-Württemberg to escape from East Germany's communist regime.
Köhler earned a doctorate in economics and political sciences from the University of Tübingen, where he was a scientific research assistant at the Institute for Applied Economic Research from 1969 to 1976.
Köhler was appointed Managing Director and Chairman of the Executive Board of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) in 2000. The German government nominated him after their first nominee, Caio Koch-Weser, was vetoed by the United States. Prior to joining the IMF, he had held positions in both the public and private sectors. He was under-secretary of state in the finance ministry from 1990 to 1993, and he served as sherpa for Chancellor Helmut Kohl, preparing G7 summits and other international economic conferences. Between 1993 and 1998 he served as chairman of the association of savings banks in Germany (Deutscher Sparkassen- und Giroverband). In 1998 he was appointed president of the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development.
On 4 March 2004, Köhler resigned his post with the IMF after being nominated by Germany's conservative and liberal opposition parties as their presidential candidate. He was selected by Angela Merkel's Christian Democratic Union (CDU), Germany's largest opposion party, and endorsed by its Bavarian sister party, Edmund Stoiber's Christian Social Union (CSU), as well as by the small liberal party, the Free Democratic Party of Germany (FDP) of Guido Westerwelle. As opposition parties currently control a majority of votes in the Bundesversammlung (an electoral college consisting of the Bundestag and an equal number of delegates from the legislatures of each state), the result of the vote vote was virtually a foregone conclusion. Köhler defeated Gesine Schwan on the first ballot by 604 votes to 580; 20 votes were cast for minor candidates, while one elector was absent because of a heart attack.
Köhler will succeed Johannes Rau as President on 1 July 2004, for a five-year term. Germany's presidency is a mostly ceremonial office, but carries considerable moral authority and gives the President a platform from which to represent his country internationally.
Upon his election, Köhler, a conservative German patriot, said that "Patriotism and being cosmopolitan are not opposites". "He appeared an enlightened patriot who genuinely loves his country and is not afraid to say so", the newspaper Die Welt wrote. Presenting his visions for Germany, Köhler also said that "Germany should become a land of ideas", and emphasized the importance of the globalisation, and that Germany would have to fight for its place in the 21th century.
He is married to Eva Köhler, born Eva Luise Bohnet, a teacher of German, and they have two children, a daughter Ulrike (born 1972) and a son Jochen (born 1977). Horst Köhler is evangelical.
External links
- Biographical information (IMF)
- Horst Köhler's speech in Berlin upon his election as president (MP3) text
- CDUs official page on Köhler
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