Dagmar Enkelmann

Dagmar Enkelmann Wiki

Celebs NameDagmar Enkelmann
GenderFemale
BirthdateApril 5, 1956
DayApril 5
Year1956
NationalityGermany
Age64 years
Birth SignAries
Body Stats
HeightNot Available
WeightNot Available
MeasurementsNot Available
Eye ColorNot Available
Hair ColorNot Available
Feet SizeNot Available
Dress SizeNot Available

Explore about the Famous German Politician Dagmar Enkelmann, who was born in Germany on April 5, 1956. Analyze Dagmar Enkelmann’s net worth, age, bio, birthday, dating, height-weight, wiki. Investigate who is Dagmar Enkelmann dating now? Look into this article to know how old is Dagmar Enkelmann?

Dagmar Enkelmann Birthday Countdown

0 0 0
Days
:
0 0
Hours
:
0 0
Minutes
:
0 0
Seconds

Dagmar Enkelmann Biography

Dagmar Enkelmann (born Dagmar Ebert: 5 April 1956) is a German politician (Die Linke (“The Left”)).

Dagmar Gertraud Elsa Ebert was born in Altlandsberg, a small historic town a short distance to the east of Berlin and at that time in the Bezirk Frankfurt of East Germany. She attended school in nearby Strausberg, passing her school leaving exams (Abitur) in 1974, which opened the way to a university level education. Between 1974 and 1979 she was a student of the History faculty at Karl Marx University (as it was known at that time) in Leipzig. She emerged with an extensive knowledge of Marxist sociology and a degree in 1979. After that she taught history between 1979 and 1985 at the “Wilhelm Pieck FDJ Youth Academy” at Bogensee, near Bernau and just outside Berlin.

Dagmar Enkelmann joined the Socialist Unity Party (“Sozialistische Einheitspartei Deutschlands”/ SED) in 1977. The SED was the ruling party in what many people thought of as a one-party dictatorship. She engaged in trades union and women work. After reunification the party rebranded itself as the Party of Democratic Socialism (PDS) and scrambled to reinvent itself for a democratic future. Enkelmann stayed with the party. She served between 2003 and 2006 as deputy leader of the PDS.

From 1985 till 1989 she was a post-graduate student (“Aspirantin”) at the ruling party central committee’s Academy for Social Sciences. It was here that she submitted her doctoral dissertation, entitled “Analysis and critique of concepts of the bourgeois ideologues in West Germany: Identity Crises of East German youth” (“Analyse und Kritik des Konzepts bürgerlicher Ideologen der BRD: Identitätskrise der Jugend der DDR”). The modalities of what happened next were affected by the political changes that followed the breach of the Berlin Wall by protestors in 1989, but Dagmar Ebert nevertheless received what amounted to a doctorate, though probably not the form of doctorate she would have been anticipating when she embarked on her researches for the work four years earlier.

At a time when her youngest child was still a young baby, Enkelmann came to national politics through active participation in the Round table movement. Between March and October 1990 she was a member of East Germany’s first – and as matters turned out last – freely elected national parliament (“Volkskammer”). She became co-leader (with Bernd Meier) of the PDS group in the chamber, and one of two PDS party members elected by party colleagues to the chambers’ Präsidium. Reunification took place formally in October 1990, at which point the East German Volkskammer and the West German Bundestag were effectively merged. In order to respect demographic fairness, only 143 members of the 400 seat East German chamber retained seats in the combined assembly. Dagmar Enkelmann was one of these, however. She was re-elected to the Bundestag, representing the Brandenburg electoral district, later in 1990, and again in 1994, leaving the Bundestag in 1998, still aged only 42. She told an interviewer that “eight years in such an exposed position” had been enough, although she never expressly ruled out a return to national politics.

Since 1998 Dagmar Enkelmann has been a local council member for the municipality of Bernau bei Berlin, and in this capacity a member of the local development agency.

Between September 1999 and October 2005 she was a member of the Brandenburg regional parliament (“Landtag”), serving till 2004 as a member of the regional party executive, spokesperson on environment and energy policy and a member of the committee for agriculture, environmental protection and planning. During 2004/2005 Dagmar Enkelmann was the leader of the PDS group in the Brandenburger Landtag.

In regional elections in Brandenburg in 2004 she put herself forward as an alternative to the regional minister president Matthias Platzeck of the centre-left Social Democratic Party. The party’s share of the vote increased to 28%, ranking a strong second to the Social Democratics. It was the best result the PDS had achieved in Brandenburg since reunification and the restoration in 1990 of Brandenburg as a state with its own regional legislature. However, it was not enough to overturn the governing coalition.

Dagmar Enkelmann married her longstanding life-partner, the meteorologist, Bernd Jaiser in 2005. It was her third marriage. She has three recorded children, born in 1976, 1981 and 1989. Since 2013 she has had four grandchildren.

At the 2005 general election Dagmar Enkelmann returned to the National Parliament (“Bundestag”). She served as Parliamentary Party Manager (“Chief Whip”) for Die Linke between 2005 and 2013. In order to avoid the distortions arising in wholly constituency based systems, the German electoral system allocates some seats on a list basis, shared between the parties according to their overall vote shares. In 2005 Enkelmann was elected because her name was sufficiently high up on the regional PDS party list. In the Bundestag she became a member of the chamber’s Council of Elders, also serving on the committee for election verification, parliamentary immunity and procedure. In the 2009 general election she stood successfully as a “direct candidate” for the Barnim II electoral district. However, in the 2013 general election, when she stood for re-election in the same constituency, she lost out to the CDU candidate, Hans-Georg von der Marwitz. Unlike von der Marwitz, Enkelmann had rejected the idea of simultaneously having her name placed on her party list as insurance against not securing direct election in the Barnim constituency, and accordingly in 2013 she left the Bundestag for a second time.

In 2005 she became Parliamentary Party Manager (“Chief Whip”) for Die Linke in the Bundestag (national parliament), a position from which she resigned in 2013 after losing her seat. In December 2012 she took on the chair of the Rosa Luxemburg Foundation, a position to which she was elected in succession to Heinz Vietze.

As a result of the 2007 merger between the PDS and the (much smaller, but briefly influential) WASG movement, Dagmar Enkelmann became a member of the party now branded simply as Die Linke (“The Left”).

She has also, since November 2008, been an alternate for Jan Korte in the third board of parliamentary trustees of the “Bundesstiftung Aufarbeitung”, a federal agency mandated with helping Germany come to terms with the East German dictatorship.

In July 2008 Dagmar Enkelmann captured the headlines, triggering a “media moment” when a television interviewer asked her, “Are you satisfied with how democracy works in Germany today?”

On 26 February 2010 Dagmar Enkelmann was one of a large number of PDS Bundestag members to be expelled from the chamber during a debate on prolonging German military involvement in Afghanistan. This arose from members standing up in the chamber and holding up to the cameras placards which showed names of victims of the Kunduz air attack. The proposal of Bundestag president Norbert Lammert that the excluded members should be permitted to participate in the vote at the end of the debate was nevertheless followed.

It became known in January 2012 that Dagmar Englemann was one of 27 Bundestag members from Die Linke (party) placed under surveillance by the security authorities. The surveillance drew criticism and condemnation from across the political spectrum.

What's Dagmar Enkelmann Net Worth 2024

Net Worth (2024) $1 Million (Approx.)
Net Worth (2023) Under Review
Net Worth (2022) Under Review
Net Worth (2021) Under Review
Net Worth (2020) Under Review

Dagmar Enkelmann Family

Father's Name Not Available
Mother's Name Not Available
Siblings Not Available
Spouse Not Available
Childrens Not Available