Ina Leukefeld
Ina Leukefeld | |
---|---|
Member of the Landtag of Thuringia for Electoral District 21 | |
Assumed office 2004 | |
Personal details | |
Born | Leipzig, East Germany | 12 December 1954
Political party | Die Linke (The Left) |
Children | 2 |
Ina Leukefeld (born 12 December 1954) is a German politician for Die Linke ("The Left") and a member of the Regional Parliament of Thuringia.[1][2][3][4]
Life[]
Leukefeld was born in Leipzig. She attended junior and middle school at Ossa near Leipzig and then progressed to the "Extended Secondary School" ("Erweiterte Oberschule" / EOS) in Windischleuba, a short distance to the south. Between 1971 and 1973, she trained and qualified as a finance at tax advisor at Suhl. Between 1973 and 1986, she worked for the town council at Suhl in the sports and youth department, of which after 1983 she became the head. During this time she undertook a remote learning study course with the Weimar based Academy for Public Administration ("Fachschule für Staatswissenschaften") and then with the Academy for National and Legal Sciences in Potsdam-Babelsberg which led, in 1985, to a degree in Public Administration ("Diplomstaatswissenschaftlerin").[3]
During 1985/86, Ina Leukefeld served as an Informal collaborator, identified in the files as "IM Sonja".[5][6] She was working not for the Ministry for State Security but for the Criminal Police service K1. It later turned out that the Criminal Police service was, for most purposes, a sub-department of the Ministry for State Security which operated its own vast network of Informal collaborators, as a key pillar of the Surveillance Society that East Germany had become. Later Leukefeld testified that she had not been aware of the close operational connections between the two branches of government and she expressed deep regret over her involvement in the government surveillance network as an Informal collaborator.[7] The activities became the subject of a parliamentary enquiry which reported in 2006, by which time she was becoming a prominent member of the Regional Parliament ("Landtag") of Thuringia.[7] In May 2006, her unfitness to serve in the parliament (""Parlamentsunwürdigkeit") under the terms of § 1 of Thuringia's "Representatives Verification Law" was established. She remained a parliamentarian and the process rolled on.[4] In July 2009, Thuringia's constitutional court ruled that the earlier decision had been unlawful because the Criminal Police service K1 department, with which Leukefeld had collaborated, was not expressly identified in the version of the relevant law that had been in force in 2006.[7]
Between 1991 and 2004, Leukefeld worked for the regional parliamentarian Gabi Zimmer in her Suhl constituency, as head of Zimmer's election office ("Die Leiterin ihres Wahlkreisbüros").[8]
During 2002/2003, she successfully completed a graduate level course in social work at the Erfurt Academy for Vocational Studies.[3]
Leukefeld has lived in Suhl since 1971 and has been married since 1972. She has two grown-up children.
Politics[]
Ina Leukefeld was a member of the Free German Youth (Young Communists) in her youth. She joined East Germany's ruling Socialist Unity Party ("Sozialistische Einheitspartei Deutschlands" / SED) in 1975. Between 1986 and 1989, she worked in the party's district leadership team ("Kreisleitung") in her home town, Suhl.[3] As reunification progressed during 1990, in 1990 the SED began to reinvent itself in preparation for a more democratic future. That year Leukefeld worked in Erfurt and Suhl for the party executive in the Thuringia region for what was now rebranding itself as the Party of Democratic Socialism (PDS). In 1994 she became a member of the municipal council in Suhl.[3] She stood as a candidate for mayor of Suhl in 2006, but the campaigning ahead of the election coincided with the sudden emergence of reports about her activities as a government informer during the dictatorship years, and she failed to secure election.[6]
In 2000 Leukefeld was elected deputy chair of the PDS regional executive for Thuringia,[9] a job she performed till November 2011.
In 2004 she was elected to the Regional Parliament ("Landtag") of Thuringia.[1] She was elected not through the party list but as a direct representative of Electoral District 21 (Suhl, Zella-Mehlis and Oberhof), re-elected most recently in 2014. The PDS having again, in 2007, been relaunched and rebranded, she is the labour market policy spokesperson in the chamber for Die Linke ("The Left" party). She is a member of the parliamentary committee on work, social affairs, health, women and family. Since 2004 she had also been a member of the Equality Committee. Between 2004 and 2014 she was a member of the committee on the economy, technology and labour.[3]
References[]
- ^ a b "Ina Leukefeld, Sprecherin für Arbeitspolitik". Fraktion DIE LINKE. im Thüringer Landtag, Erfurt. Retrieved 10 July 2017.
- ^ "Ina Leukefeld". abgeordnetenwatch.de. Retrieved 10 July 2017.
- ^ a b c d e f "Hüte Dich vor Politikern, die auf jede Frage eine Antwort haben! ... Persönliche Biografie". Fraktion DIE LINKE, Berlin & Wahlkreisbüro Ina Leukefeld, Suhl. Retrieved 10 July 2017.
- ^ a b "Plenarprotokoll im Volltext ... zur Tätigkeit Leukefelds S. ... Bekanntgabe der Entscheidung des Erweiterten Gremiums zum Abschluss der Einzelfallprüfung bezüglich der Abgeordneten Leukefeld gemäß § 7 Abs. 1 des Gesetzes zur Überprüfung der Abgeordneten des Thüringer Landtags auf eine hauptamtliche oder inoffizielle Zusammenarbeit mit dem Ministerium für Staatssicherheit oder dem Amt für Nationale Sicherheit" (PDF). Thüringer Landtag – 4. Wahlperiode – 38. Sitzung, 4 May 2006 ... Plenarprotokoll 4/38. pp. 3768–3771. Retrieved 10 July 2017.
- ^ Hubertus Knabe: Honeckers Erben – Die Wahrheit über DIE LINKE, Berlin 2009, p. 320.
- ^ a b Jana Hensel (1 October 2009). "Leben mit dem Makel". Die Linke-Abgeordnete Ina Leukefeld war IM »Sonja«. Dafür hat sie sich entschuldigt. Aber reicht das, um weiter Politik zu machen?. Die Zeit (online). Retrieved 11 July 2017.
- ^ a b c Katrin Hess, Justizangestellte als Urkundsbeamte der Geschäftsstelle (1 July 2009). "THÜRINGER VERFASSUNGSGERICHTSHOF VerfGH 21/06 URTEIL IM NAMEN DES VOLKES" (PDF). wegen Überprüfung nach dem Thüringer Abgeordneten überprüfungsgesetz. Thüringer Verfassungsgerichtshof, Weimar. Retrieved 11 July 2017.
- ^ Stefan Berg; Almut Hielscher (22 May 2000). ""Asyl vor uns selbst"". Parteien ... Offiziell erklärt die PDS-Spitze die Führungskrise für beendet. Doch der vergreisten Partei fehlt es an einer sozialistischen Zukunftsvision – und an Zulauf im Westen. Der Spiegel (online). Retrieved 11 July 2017.
- ^ Volkhard Paczulla (28 November 2009). "Schleiz: Thüringer Linke bestraft ihren Vorsitzenden". (final paragraph). Mediengruppe Thüringen Verlag GmbH (Ostthüringer Zeitung), Erfurt. Retrieved 11 July 2017.
- 1954 births
- Living people
- Politicians from Leipzig
- Members of the Landtag of Thuringia
- Socialist Unity Party of Germany members
- Party of Democratic Socialism (Germany) politicians
- The Left (Germany) politicians
- People of the Stasi