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Till Backhaus

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Occupation
  
Spouse
  
Ivonne Menzel (m. 2012)

Role
  
German Politician

Name
  
Till Backhaus

Religion
  
Lutheran


Till Backhaus Deutschland MecklenburgVorpommern Backhaus und der


Born
  
13 March 1959
Amt Neuhaus, Lower Saxony, GDR (East Germany)

Political party
  
Similar People
  
Erwin Sellering, Harry Glawe, Mathias Brodkorb, Lorenz Caffier, Harald Ringstorff

Ministerpräsidenten mit großer Delegation nach Russland


Till Backhaus (born Neuhaus 13 March 1959) is a German politician. As the German Democratic Republic approached its end as a standalone state, Backhaus was one of those who in December 1989 (re-)founded the Social Democratic Party, more than four decades after its suppression.

Contents

Till Backhaus Agrarminister unter Beschuss ExGeliebte verklagt Till

More recently, in 1998 he was appointed regional Minister for Agriculture in Mecklenburg-Vorpommern, a post he retains, making him the longest serving regional minister currently (2014) in office in Germany.

Till Backhaus Till Backhaus Wikipedia

Early years

Till Backhaus Hilfe in Aussicht Backhaus will Steuern stunden

Till Backhaus was born at Neuhaus roughly 3 km (2 miles) to the east of Elbe River which at that time marked the Inner German border dividing East from West Germany, and which through the 1950s was being increasingly fortified along its eastern bank in order to prevent people escaping from the east to the west. In 1978 Backhaus successfully completed his secondary schooling at nearby Pritzier-Schwechow with a vocational qualification in agro-technology. He spent two years undertaking his Military service with the National People's Army before moving on, in 1980, to the University of Rostock where he concluded his studies, in 1985, with a degree in Agricultural engineering.

Early career

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In 1980 he also started working for the Neuhaus Agricultural Production Co-operative, later transferring to the nearby Lübtheen Agricultural Production Co-operative, where he worked as a department head till 1990.

The Social Democratic Party

In West Germany the Social Democratic Party (SPD) had been the mainstream political party of the (generally moderate) left for more than a century. In East Germany, however, the SPD had effectively ceased to exist in April 1946 when, in the Soviet occupation zone, the SPD and the Communist Party KPD had been forcibly merged in order to create the SED. Although the merger had nominally been one of equals, by 1950 former SPD members had been squeezed out and the SED had become virtually the (East) German Communist Party by another name, while moderate left-wing opinion was left unrepresented in the new country. There was merit in the argument that it had been divisions between moderate and extreme left wing politicians in the 1920s and 30s that had weakened democratic government institutions and opened the way for the capture of political power by the NSDAP (Nazi Party) in the run up to 1933, but in East Germany one-party government under the SED in the 1950s, 60s, 70s and 80s became uncomfortably reminiscent of one-party government under the Nazis in the 1930s and 40s. In October 1989 a critical step in the accelerating collapse of the German Democratic Republic came with the re-appearance of the moderate left SDP (party) in East Germany. The next month Berlin Wall was breached, and in December 1989, the month in which even the country's monolithic SED felt the need to participate with the Social Democrats in "round table talks", Till Backhaus, who hitherto had not engaged in politics, joined the SDP and was a co-founder of its Neuhaus (Elbe) district branch. After German reunification in October 1990 the eastern and western branches of the SPD came together into a single national party, and Backhaus has remained an active party leader in the locality since then. Reflecting administrative boundary changes, he was district party chairman for the SPD in the Hagenow district from 1991 till 1994, and for the Hagenow-Ludwigslust district from 1994 till 2003.

At the regional level, between 2003 and 2007 he served as Chairman for Mecklenburg-Vorpommern region SPD group and a member of the leadership team between 2005 and 2007. Reflecting his agricultural qualifications and subsequent ministerial responsibilities (see below) he has for many years been a leading spokesman for the regional party on consumer affairs, food and agriculture.

Memberships of national and regional legislatures

Between March and October 1990 Backhaus sat as one of the 91 SPD members of the German Democratic Republic's first (and, as thing turned out, last) freely elected National legislative Assembly (Volkskammer).

At the regional level he has since 1990 sat as a member of the Mecklenburg-Vorpommern regional legislative assembly. Between 1990 and 1994 he was elected from the SPD Mecklenburg-Vorpommern regional list, and since 1994 he has represented the "Ludwigslust I" subdivision electoral district within the Mecklenburg-Vorpommernregion). Within the assembly, between 1992 and 1998 he was chairman of the Agriculture Committee, and from 1994 till 1998 of the Agriculture and Nature Protection committee.

At the local level he was, between 2004 and 2006, a member of the local council for the Ludwigslust district.

Ministerial office

After the 1998 regional election Backhaus was offered the position of Minister for Food, agriculture, forestry and fisheries for Mecklenburg-Vorpommern in the regional administration headed up, at that time, by his party colleague Harald Ringstorff. Backhaus accepted the post, and retained it (now with Consumer protection and environmental protection added to the portfolio) it after 7 November 2006 when, controversially, the Mecklenburg-Vorpommern SPD entered into a ruling coalition with the CDU (party), following regional election results that had been disappointing for both parties.

The long word

Mecklenburg-Vorpommern is a relatively rural state and the Agriculture ministry has given Backhaus a high ministerial profile in the region. In 1999 his department came up with a legislative proposal which broke records for an unusual reason.

The Rindfleischetikettierungsüberwachungsaufgabenübertragungsgesetz (a law on the supervision of beef labelling) is defined using a grammatically valid and usable compound noun of 63 letters. The word featured in the Guinness Book of Records until 1996 when it was controversially challenged for the top spot by the creation of a longer word. But for many the word created by Backhaus's ministry was toppled from its position as Germany's longest official word only in 2013 when it was withdrawn from use by the regional assembly because the law it defined had been repealed.

Controversies

Till Backhaus has frequently featured in the headlines, often in controversial circumstances.

In 2015, as the minister responsible, he was called upon to make a ministerial statement after the (presumably temporary) closure of Rostock zoo in the wake of a bird flu scare which had necessitated the precautionary killing of storks, ducks and a red ibis. Nor was this the first bird flu scare in the region to necessitate ministerial intervention. In the preceding fifteen years his intervention has frequently been invoked in other food, agriculture and environment related scares.

A more personal media controversy arose in respect of the Doctorate in Agriculture which Backhaus received from Berlin's Humboldt University in 2001. His dissertation was entitled "Reflections on Grain Production in Mecklenburg-Vorpommern between 1900 and 2000". Sources are silent over when the work was started, but public reaction may have been triggered by the fact that by the time he actually received the doctorate Backhaus had already been the regional Minister for Agriculture for more than two years. The Agriculture Scientist Wilhelm Römer went public with his opinion that the dissertation was an "insubstantial compilation" without "formal scientific substance" ("substanzlos[es] Machwerk ... [der] ... weder inhaltlich noch formal wissenschaftlichen Ansprüchen [entspräche]"). There was also criticism that the dissertation had been supervised in 2000 and 2001 by Norbert Makowski, a distinguished plant-scientist who at the time was alleged to have been undertaking paid consultancy work indirectly involving the ministry.

Outside politics

Between 1 January 2008 31 December 2009 Backhaus served on the board of the Regional Savings Bank.

He is currently (2014) chairman of the supervisory board of Landgesellschaft Mecklenburg-Vorpommern mbH, a business involved in land and property.

Personal

Till Backhaus has three children from two of his three marriages. He married his third wife, Ivonne Menzel, in June 2012. Press attention focused not on her career as a dentist, but on her youth and her recent celebrity as a beauty queen.

References

Till Backhaus Wikipedia