Bettina Jarasch | |
|---|---|
Jarasch in 2014 | |
| Deputy Governing Mayor of Berlin | |
| In office 21 December 2021 – 27 April 2023 Serving with Klaus Lederer | |
| Governing Mayor | Franziska Giffey |
| Preceded by | Ramona Pop |
| Succeeded by | Franziska Giffey |
| Senator for Environment, Climate Protection, Mobility and Consumer Protection of Berlin | |
| In office 21 December 2021 – 27 April 2023 | |
| Governing Mayor | Franziska Giffey |
| Preceded by | Regine Günther |
| Succeeded by | Manja Schreiner |
| Leader ofAlliance 90/The Greens inBerlin | |
| In office 6 March 2011 – 12 December 2016 Serving with Daniel Wesener | |
| Preceded by | Irmgard Franke-Dressler &Stefan Gelbhaar |
| Succeeded by | Nina Stahr & Werner Graf |
| Member of theAbgeordnetenhaus of Berlin | |
| Assumed office 16 March 2023 | |
| In office 18 September 2016 – 2 January 2022 | |
| Personal details | |
| Born | Bettina Hartmann (1968-11-22)22 November 1968 (age 57) |
| Political party | Alliance 90/The Greens |
| Children | 2 |
Bettina Jarasch (néeHartmann, born 22 November 1968) is a German politician ofAlliance 90/The Greens who served asDeputy Mayor andSenator for Environment, Mobility, Consumer and Climate Protection in theBerlin state government from December 2021 to April 2023. She has been a member of theAbgeordnetenhaus of Berlin from 2016 to 2021 and again since 2023, as well as leader of theBerlin branch of the Greens from 2011 to 2016. She was the Greens' lead candidate for the2021 Berlin state election and again for the2023 Berlin repeat state election.
Jarasch is the daughter of Helmut Hartmann, entrepreneur and former member of theSenate of Bavaria. She studiedphilosophy andpolitical science at theFree University of Berlin.
Early in her career, Jarasch worked as an editor, consultant, and author.[1] She was an advisor to the Alliance 90/The Greens parliamentary group in the GermanBundestag from 2000 to 2009; until 2005 for MdB Christa Nickels, and thereafter for parliamentary leaderRenate Künast.
In 2009, Jarasch became a member of the Green Party's leadership in Berlin, and was spokeswoman for education.[1]
On 6 March 2011, Jarasch was elected co-leader of the Berlin Greens alongside Daniel Wesener. In 2013, she was elected to the federal Greens executive, becoming head of the party's commission for "religious communities, ideologies, and the state". She left this office in 2018.
Jarasch was one of a four lead candidates for the Greens in the2016 Berlin state election. She was placed third on the party list behindRamona Pop and Antje Kapek, and ahead of fellow co-leader Daniel Wesener, and was elected to the Abgeordnetenhaus.[1] At the end of the year, she and Wesener left office as co-leaders.
Jarasch ran for the top position on the Berlin state list in the2017 federal election after Renate Künast indicated she would accept third place. She was challenged byLisa Paus for the position, and was defeated 798 votes to 308. She subsequently did not run for election to the Bundestag.[2]
On 5 October 2020, Jarasch was nominated by the Berlin party leadership as lead candidate for the 2021 state election. Her nomination was received with surprise, asSenator Ramona Pop and parliamentary group leader Antje Kapek had been considered the most likely candidates.RBB attributed this to division within the party surrounding Pop and Kapek which allowed Jarasch to secure the nomination.[1] At a party conference on 12 December, Jarasch was formally elected as the top candidate, receiving 142 votes in favour, none against, and five abstentions.[3]
Jarasch declared that she sought to make the Greens the biggest party in the Abgeordnetenhaus, and to become the first GreenGoverning Mayor of Berlin. This reflected opinion polling, which showed the Greens consistently in first place since the end of 2018. She expressed her satisfaction with the incumbentSPD–Left–Green coalition, and spoke poorly of theChristian Democratic Union, indicating she may not seek an agreement with the CDU as other branches of the Greens have.[4]
The Greens placed second in the2021 Berlin state election, winning 18.9% of votes compared to 21.4% for the SPD and 18.0% for the CDU. Post-election, Jarasch spoke out in favour of renewing the incumbent coalition.[5] After a new SPD–Green–Left government was negotiated, Jarasch became Deputy Governing Mayor and Senator for Environment, Mobility, Consumer and Climate Protection in theGiffey senate on 21 December.[6]
Jarasch was nominated by her party as delegate to theFederal Convention for the purpose of electing thePresident of Germany in2017[7] and2022.[8][9]
Jarasch is active within theCatholic Church, and has been the leader of thepastoral council of the St. Marien-Liebfrauen congregation inBerlin-Kreuzberg for many years. In November 2016, theCentral Committee of German Catholics elected Jarasch as one of 45 distinguished persons.[10] On 24 November 2017, she was elected spokesperson for the "Basic Political and Ethical Issues" department in the Central Committee.[11]
Alongside eight other theologians and well-known Catholics, in February 2019, Jarasch penned an open letter toCardinalReinhard Marx. The signatories called for a "new start in regard to sexual morality", including "reasonable and just assessment of homosexuality", "real separation of powers" in the church, and curbing the excesses of the ordination office and opening it to women. They appealed to theGerman Bishops' Conference to give diocesan priests the freedom to choose their way of life, "so that celibacy can again credibly refer to the kingdom of heaven".[12]
Jarasch is considered a member of the moderateRealo wing of the party.[3][1]
Jarasch is married to journalist Oliver Jarasch, who is a department head atRundfunk Berlin-Brandenburg. They have two children.[13]