Christoph Ahlhaus

Christoph Ahlhaus (born 28 August 1969) is a German politician. He is a representative of the German Christian Democratic Union which he joined in 1985. He was the mayor of Hamburg from August 2010 to March 2011.

Christoph Ahlhaus
Minister of the Interior of Hamburg
In office
7 May 2008  25 August 2010
Preceded byUdo Nagel
Succeeded byHeino Vahldieck
First Mayor of Hamburg
In office
25 August 2010  7 March 2011
Preceded byOle von Beust
Succeeded byOlaf Scholz
Personal details
Born (1969-08-28) 28 August 1969
Heidelberg, West Germany
NationalityGerman
Political partyCDU

Personal life

Ahlhaus was born on 28 August 1969 in Heidelberg, Baden-Württemberg, where he grew up. From 1988 to 1990 he completed an apprenticeship for banking, and from that same year went on to study law at the universities of Heidelberg, Munich, Berlin, and Speyer .[1] In 1998 he did a clerkship, with a station at the German University of Administrative Sciences in Speyer. In 1999 he qualified as an attorney.

Since May 2006, he has been married to Simone Ahlhaus (née Götz).[2][3]

Ahlhaus was a member of the fraternity Turnerschaft Ghibellinia zu Heidelberg.

In the summer of 2014 Ahlhaus moved with his family to Berlin. There he works as a lawyer in a law firm.[4]

Politics in the CDU

Christoph Ahlhaus, who represented the CDU from 1985, was Chairman of the municipality association of Heidelberg-Altstadt-Schlierbach and Deputy Chairman of the District Association of Heidelberg until 2001. From 2001 to 2006 he was regional secretary of the CDU in Hamburg. From March 2004 to March 2006 he was a member of the Parliament of the Free and Hanseatic City of Hamburg, as part of the legal and home affairs committees. Until June 2012, he was the Chairman of the CDU in Hamburg-Nord.

Member of the Hamburg Senate

In April 2006, Mayor Ole von Beust appointed him as state councilor of the Department of Sport and Home Affairs.[5] On 7 May 2008, Ahlhaus replaced Udo Nagel and became the Home affairs senator of the Free and Hanseatic City of Hamburg.

in September 2009, without having informed his party beforehand, Ahlhaus planned to reduce the casino tax in Hamburg from 90% to 50%. This would have allowed the casinos to save approximately 30 million euros in taxes up to 2010. A scandalous fact was that John Jahr Jr. (from Gruner & Jahr) was one of the bosses of the casino, as well as the co-founder of the real-estate company in which Ahlhaus' wife had led their license marketing since 2009.[6][7]

Also criticised was the use of state-funded money for paying towards his villa and second home in Altona (which cost around 1.2 million Euros).[8]

In the "company car affair", he had to make an additional payment of EUR 59.40 for private car use.[9]

Ahlhaus continued despite tight budgets in 2010 through the acquisition of a riding squad with a total investment of approximately €600,000 and annual operating costs of €200,000.[10] Under Interior Minister Michael Neumann (SPD) entertainment contracts are to be closed by 2015.[11] His desire to hold on to the continued existence of the police orchestra, with an annual cost of 1.5 million euros, was in some part because of a lack of understanding, despite his cuts in the cultural department. His successor Scholz upholds this tradition.[12][13]

First Mayor of the Free and Hanseatic City of Hamburg

On 18 July 2010, Beust announced his resignation as mayor of Hamburg, so he could devote more time to his personal life. His recommendation to nominate Christoph Ahlhaus as his successor was unanimously followed by Hamburg's CDU Regional Executive. The election of the First Mayor of the CDU-Green Senate majority was fixed for the first meeting of the citizenry after the parliamentary summer recess on 25 August 2010. However, the coalition partners GAL initially reacted skeptically to the nomination of Christoph Ahlhaus. They called on the conservative hardliner politicians to follow Beust's liberal route and to abide by the coalition agreement. Ahlhaus put himself firmly behind the agreement between the CDU and GAL, which had existed since 2008, and also expressed his readiness to face the Green base in August 2010. After the meeting with the basis of the GAL on August 18, both Ahlhaus and representatives of the GAL expressed confidence in being able to continue the CDU-Green coalition. The Green Youth party demanded an exit from the coalition.

Ahead of the planned election Ahlhaus' membership in the Turnerschaft Ghibellinia was made public. This triggered anger in the GAL, and leaders of the party put the support of their faction in the election for the Lord Mayor in question. They demanded Ahlhaus' clarification about his relations with the Turnerschaft and complained that in their view, nationalist tendencies and misogynistic principles are present in connections with the Coburg Convents. Ahlhaus stated that he had not had contact with the Heidelberg Turnerschaft for years. He had asked the chairman of the fraternity to no longer consider him a member.

When choosing the First Mayor on 25 August 2010 it came in spite of previous disputes as a surprise. Christoph Ahlhaus received 70 votes in favor on the first ballot, two votes more than the black-green coalition MPs managed. Citizenship MPs of the opposition from both the SPD and the Left had also voted for Ahlhaus. 50 MPs voted against him, and one abstained.

Election and term of office

On 28 November 2010, both the GAL parliamentary group, the GAL Senators and the State Executive Committee of the GAL decided to end the coalition, prompting Ahlhaus to order the dismissal of the GAL senators and state councilors on 29 November 2010. Since then, Ahlhaus has led a CDU minority government.

References

  1. Lebenslauf Christoph Ahlhaus, Innensenator (in German), Behörde für Inneres, archived from the original on 2009-06-15, retrieved 2009-07-26
  2. Florian Hanauer (20 July 2010). "Was bedeutet das Ergebnis des Hamburger Votums ... für Christoph Ahlhaus?". welt.de. Retrieved 15 December 2014.
  3. "Ermittlungen: Razzia bei Hamburgs Ex-Bürgermeister Ahlhaus". Spiegel Online. 29 February 2012. Retrieved 15 December 2014.
  4. "Christoph Ahlhaus hält bewegende Abschiedsrede im Rathaus". abendblatt.de. 5 November 2014. Retrieved 15 December 2014.
  5. Lebenslauf Christoph Ahlhaus Archived 2013-05-13 at the Wayback Machine
  6. www.mopo.de
  7. www.mopo.de
  8. "Hamburg: Ermittlungen gegen Ex-Bürgermeister Ahlhaus eingestellt". Spiegel Online. 11 December 2012. Retrieved 15 December 2014.
  9. www.mopo.de
  10. Lisa Hemmerich (29 September 2010). "Innensenator schickt Reiterstaffel erstmals auf Streife". abendblatt.de. Retrieved 15 December 2014.
  11. "Reiterstaffel soll weiter Polizei verstärken". abendblatt.de. 20 September 2012. Retrieved 15 December 2014.
  12. "Polizeiorchester 2012/2013". Archived from the original on 2012-11-14. Retrieved 2015-07-22.
  13. www.mopo.de
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