Hilde Mattheis

Hildegard "Hilde" Mattheis (née Gudelius, born 6 October 1954) is a German teacher and politician of the Social Democratic Party of Germany (SPD) who has been serving as a member of the Bundestag since 2002.

Hilde Mattheis
Member of the Bundestag
Assumed office
2002
Personal details
Born (1954-10-06) 6 October 1954
Finnentrop, West Germany
(now Germany)
CitizenshipGerman
Nationality Germany
Political partySPD
Children2

Early life and career

Mattheis was born 1954 in the West German town of Finnentrop and became a teacher.[1]

Political career

Mattheis entered the SPD in 1986 and is since 1995 member of the chairmanship of her party in the state association of Baden-Württemberg. [2]

Mattheis has been a member of the German Bundestag since the 2002 national elections, representing Ulm.[3] She has since been serving on the Committee on Health. In that capacity, she was her parliamentary group’s rapporteur on issues including elderly care and psychiatry.[4] From 2002 until 2005, she was also a member of the Committee on Petitions.

Within the SPD parliamentary group, Mattheis belongs to the Parliamentary Left, a left-wing movement.[5] From 2005 until 2007, she was part of the parliamentary group’s leadership around chairman Peter Struck. She has been part of internal working groups on health (since 2002), migration and consumer protection (since 2019).

In 2009, Mattheis came in second only after Nils Schmid in an internal party vote on the leadership of the SPD in Baden-Württemberg;[6] she subsequently became one of his four deputies.

In the negotiations to form a Grand Coalition of Chancellor Angela Merkel's Christian Democrats (CDU together with the Bavarian CSU) and the SPD following the 2013 federal elections, she was part of the SPD delegation in the working group on health policy, led by Jens Spahn and Karl Lauterbach. Appointed by Federal Minister of Health Hermann Gröhe, she served as member of an expert commission on the reform of Germany’s hospital care from 2015 until 2017.[7]

Mattheis was (together with her running mate Dierk Hirschel) a candidate for the 2019 Social Democratic Party of Germany leadership election;[8] however, she withdrew her candidacy shortly before the vote.

In July 2020, Mattheis announced that she would not stand in the 2021 federal elections but instead resign from active politics by the end of the parliamentary term.[9]

Other activities

Political positions

Mattheis was one of the most vocal opponents of her party’s decision to enter into negotiations to form a coalition government under the leadership of Chancellor Angela Merkel following the 2017 federal elections.[4][10][11] Between 2018 and 2019, she was the one member of the SPD parliamentary group who voted most often against the party line.[12]

Personal life

Mattheis and her husband live in Ulm’s Söflingen district.[13]

gollark: Elytræ?
gollark: 400 for what?
gollark: Hid6.
gollark: My site is mostly static, so I can just have it save the HTML/JS/CSS in the cache.
gollark: You couldn't do it with that, since it relies on the Google backend to actually do searching.

References

  1. "Deutscher Bundestag - Hilde Mattheis". Deutscher Bundestag.
  2. MdB, Hilde Mattheis. "Lebenslauf - Hilde Mattheis MdB". www.hilde-mattheis.de.
  3. "abgeordnetenwatch.de | Profil von Hilde Mattheis, SPD - Bundestag". abgeordnetenwatch.de.
  4. Guy Chazan (January 16, 2018), SPD failure to deliver German healthcare reform riles party base Financial Times.
  5. Members Parlamentarische Linke.
  6. Baden-Württemberg, S. P. D. "Start - Leidenschaftlich für Land und Leute". www.spd-bw.de.
  7. Expertenkommission "Pflegepersonal im Krankenhaus" Federal Ministry of Health, press release of October 1, 2015.
  8. GmbH, Südwest Presse Online-Dienste (August 18, 2019). "SPD Vorsitz: Hilde Mattheis: Ulmer Abgeordnete will für SPD-Vorsitz kandidieren". swp.de.
  9. Johannes Rauneker (July 3, 2020), Mattheis kehrt Bundespolitik den Rücken: Ulmer SPD muss sich neu aufstellen Schwäbische Zeitung.
  10. Katrin Bennhold and Melissa Eddy (January 21, 2018), Angela Merkel Spared Disaster, and German Coalition Talks to Continue New York Times.
  11. Marcus Walker and Bojan Pancevski (March 2, 2018), Europe’s Political Riddle: What Happened to the Moderate Left? Wall Street Journal.
  12. Ferdinand Kuchlmayr and Marcel Pauly (August 4, 2019), Abweichler im Bundestag: Parlamentarischer Ungehorsam Der Spiegel.
  13. Jakob Resch (October 6, 2014), Hilde Mattheis wird 60 Jahre alt und freut sich über mehr Gelassenheit Südwest Presse.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.