(1941-01-16)16 January 1941 Bad Sachsa, Thuringia, Germany (now Germany)
Died
3 February 2021(2021-02-03) (aged 80)
Nationality
German
Political party
CDU
Klaus Bühler (16 January 1941 – 3 February 2021[1]) was a German politician of the Christian Democratic Union (CDU) who served as member of the German Bundestag.[2]
Life[]
After elementary school, Buhler attended the humanistic grammar school in Bruchsal. This was followed by teacher training in Heidelberg and Karlsruhe. In 1965 he became district chairman of the Junge Union in the district of Bruchsal, which he remained for ten years. From 1968 to 1976 he was a member of the Bruchsal municipal council. From 1971 to 1976 he was also a member of the Bruchsal district council and Karlsruhe district council respectively. He worked as a secondary school teacher until 1974, after which he became head of the Heidelberg branch office for the Karlsruhe administrative district of the Landeszentrale für politische Bildung.
In 1976 he was elected to the Bundestag for the first time and returned to parliament in the following legislative periods. Since 1987 he was the representative of the Federal Republic of Germany in the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe and at the same time representative in the Assembly of the Western European Union. In 2002 he resigned from the Bundestag.
Speaker: , Petra Kelly, Otto Schily until 3 April 1984; , , Antje Vollmer until 30./31. January 1985;
, , Christian Schmidt until 1 February 1986; , , until 18 July 1986); (8 September 1986)
Die Grünen:
(from 17 April 1985)
(until 31 March 1985)
Bastian
(until 14 April 1985)
(from 1 April 1985)
(from 1 April 1985)
(until 15 March 1985)
(from 2 March 1985)
(until 31 March 1985)
(until 28 March 1985)
(from 17 April 1985)
Fischer (until 31 March 1985)
(from 20 January 1986)
(from 14 March 1986)
Gottwald (until 31 March 1985)
(until 31 August 1983)
(until 9 March 1985)
(from 13 April 1985)
Horácek (from 2 September 1983 until 3 October 1985)
Speaker: , , until 26 January 1988; , , until 30 January 1989, , Jutta Oesterle-Schwerin, Antje Vollmer until 15 January 1990; , (until 21 June 1990), Marianne Birthler (from 4 October 1990), Antje Vollmer