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Axel Fischer | |
|---|---|
| Member of theBundestag | |
| In office 1998–2021 | |
| Personal details | |
| Born | (1966-05-05)5 May 1966 (age 59) |
| Citizenship | German |
| Political party | CDU |
| Alma mater | University of Karlsruhe |
Axel Eduard Fischer (born 5 May 1966) is a German politician. He is a member of theCDU and has been a member of theGerman parliament from 1998 to October 2021, representingKarlsruhe-Land since 2002.
From 1989 until 1995, Fischer studiedmechanical engineering at theUniversity of Karlsruhe.
In parliament, Fischer first served on the Committee on Education, Research and Technology Assessment from 1998 until 2009. From the2009 elections, he was a member of the Budget Committee and the Audit Committee. In this capacity, he served asrapporteur on the annual budget of theFederal Ministry of Labour and Social Affairs (BMAS) and theFederal Employment Agency (BA). He was also a member of the German Parliament's Berlin-Taipei Parliamentary Circle of Friends.
In addition to his committee assignments, Fischer was member of the German delegation to theParliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe (PACE) from 2010 until 2018. In 2009 he succeededEdward O'Hara as chairman of the Committee on Technology and Aerospace. He also served asrapporteur onArmenia from 2011 until 2014 (alongsideJohn Prescott and laterAlan Meale)[1][2] and onUkraine in 2017.[3] From 2014 until 2018, he was one of the Assembly's vice-presidents.[4]
Following the2017 German federal election, the CDU/CSU parliamentary group decided against including Fischer in its list of nominees for Germany's new 18 person-strong delegation to PACE; the decision has been linked in media reports to his alleged role in limiting PACE's efforts to hold the Azerbaijan government underIlham Aliyev accountable for human rights abuses as well as possible corruption.[5][6][7][8]
In early 2020, Fischer co-founded an informal cross-party group of MPs from the CDU, CSU andFDP parties who opposed a potential coalition government between CDU/CSU and theGreen Party.[9]
By March 2021, the CDU/CSU parliamentary group's leadership announced that Fischer would be replaced as chair of the Audit Committee.[10] He was succeeded byCarsten Körber.[11]
In October 2021, Fischer no longer ran as a candidate for Bundestag for the2021 German federal election.[12]
In response to theGreek government-debt crisis, Fischer andRüdiger Kruse proposed in 2015 that German holidaymakers whose holiday spending helps boost the Greek economy should be reimbursed 500 euros by the German state on their return, on condition that the hotel and restaurants they visited have paid their taxes.[13]
In June 2017, Fischer voted against Germany's introduction ofsame-sex marriage.[14]
In 2017, theUnion parliamentary group withdrew Fischer's appointment to the newBundestag delegation at theCouncil of Europe because of his implication in the "Caviar Diplomacy" corruption scandal inPACE.[15]
In March 2021, Fischer became the subject of an investigation over allegations that he took payments for political activity in the interests of theAzerbaijani government.[16] On March 4, 2021, following a request from the Munich Public Prosecutor's Office, the German Bundestag lifted Fischer'sparliamentary immunity.[17] Subsequently, theBKA conducted a search at his parliamentary office in relation to the public prosecutor's investigation, on the initial suspicion of corruption, into payments from the "Azerbaijani Laundromat" money-laundering scheme to active and former members of the Bundestag for lobbying activities to promote Azerbaijani interests at the Council of Europe.
In January 2024 German prosecutors brought bribery and corruption charges against Axel Fischer andEduard Lintner (another CDU member implicated in theAzerbaijani laundromat).[18][19]
Fischer is married for the second time and has six children. His father is the former President of the University of Applied Sciences in Karlsruhe Werner Fischer and one of his brothers is the swiss politician and pastorLutz Fischer-Lamprecht