Frank Tempel | |
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Member of the German Bundestag | |
In office 2009–2017 | |
Personal details | |
Born | (1969-01-19)January 19, 1969 (age 56) Belzig,Germany |
Political party | The Left |
Children | 4 |
Occupation | Political |
Frank Tempel (born January 19, 1969) is a German politician (Die Linke). He was amember of the German Bundestag from 2009 to 2017, where he was the drug policy spokesman for the Bundestag parliamentary group from May 2010. In January 2014, Frank Tempel was elected unopposed as deputychairman of the Bundestag's Interior Committee. He was the first politician from Die Linke party to hold this post. From 2017 to 2019, he was head of the Domestic Violence Coordination Office inThuringia. Since 2020, he has been back at the criminal investigation department in Gera.
Frank Tempel was born on January 19, 1969, in Belzig in theGDR as the son of a teacher couple. After attending the "Hanno Günther" polytechnic high school, he completed a three-year vocational training program with a high school diploma to become an agricultural machinery fitter. In 1988, Tempel committed himself to a career as a professional officer in theborder troops of the GDR. He began his officer studies at the officer college of the border troops of the GDR "Rosa Luxemburg" inSuhl, but did not finish this due to the events surrounding the political change in the GDR. Tempel received a job as a social worker from 1990 to 1991, during which he supervised a youth project of theFDJ in Suhl in the area of social work. He then worked as a professional driver dismantling border installations inSonneberg. After working briefly as a car mechanic, he was able to begin training in 1993 in the intermediate police civil service in Thuringia. After this training, he transferred to theMeiningen Police School in December 1996 to complete a two-year course of study at auniversity of applied sciences, which he finished in December 1998 with a degree in administration (Diplom-Verwaltungswirt (FH) Fachbereich Polizei). In 1999, Tempel was appointed as a criminal investigator in the higher service.
Tempel has been active in thepolice union since 1995, including two years as state chairman of the GdP's Young People's Group in Thuringia.
After leaving the German Bundestag, he returned to police service in November 2017. Shortly thereafter, he was seconded by the Thuringian state government to the newly established Domestic Violence Coordination Office in his capacity as a police officer. After two years, he returned to his old assignment at the Gera Criminal Investigation Department.
Frank Tempel lives in Zehma in a partnership and is the father of four children.
When he began his officer studies, Tempel became a candidate for the SED.[1] In 1990, he applied for a state parliamentary mandate as a candidate of the FDJ,[2] whose state executive committee he was temporarily a member of, on the list of the Left List/PDS.[3] However, he failed to enter parliament. In 1992, Tempel resigned from the PDS. In 2001, he again became a member of the PDS and - due to his place of residence - was active in the Altenburger Land district association.[1] In 2004, Tempel moved into the Altenburger Land district council.[3] Since 2007, he has also led the Altenburger Land district association of the Die Linke party as chairman. Furthermore, he is one of the initiators and a board member ofLEAP (Law Enforcement Against Prohibition) Deutschland e. V., which advocates thelegalization of drugs.[4]
In May 2016, he was elected to the executive board of Die Linke party.
In 2005, he ran for a seat in the Bundestag for the first time as a candidate in theGreiz - Altenburger Land constituency. With 25.9% of the first vote and 6th place on the state list, he failed to make it into parliament. Since September 29, 2009, he was a successor toBodo Ramelow as a member of the 16th German Bundestag, which, however, no longer held a session. For the2009 Bundestag election, Tempel received 29.3% of the first-past-the-post votes, which were not enough to win a direct mandate. Through the list position 4 he moved into the 17th German Bundestag. In the2013 Bundestag election, he ran again at No. 4 on his party's state list and remained a member of the Bundestag. In the 18th Bundestag, Tempel was a full member of the Interior Committee and its deputy chairman.[5] On November 3, 2015, he was elected deputy chairman of his party's parliamentary group in the Bundestag.[6]
In the2017 Bundestag election, he failed to win a direct mandate with 18.7% of the vote in the newly tailored Bundestag constituency of Gera - Greiz - Altenburger Land, and also fell short of entering the 19th German Bundestag via 4th place on his party's state list.
For the2021 federal election, Tempel stood for his party in the constituencySaalfeld-Rudolstadt - Saale-Holzland-Kreis - Saale-Orla-Kreis,[7] but was not elected to parliament, but is the first successor of his party in Thuringia.