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Federal Minister for Special Affairs of Germany

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Member of the German government without portfolio
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(February 2025) (Learn how and when to remove this message)
Federal Minister for Special Affairs
Bundesminister für besondere Aufgaben
Incumbent
Thorsten Frei
since 6 May 2025
Formation6 October 1953
First holderFranz Josef Strauß

AFederal Minister for Special Affairs (German:Bundesminister für besondere Aufgaben,pronounced[ˈbʊndəsmiˌnɪstɐfyːɐ̯bəˈzɔndəʁəˈʔaʊfˌɡaːbn̩]) is a member of theGerman governmentwithout portfolio.

Ministers for Special Affairs are fully-fledged members of the cabinet, but are not assigned their own ministry. The reasons why a chancellor appoints one or more such ministers to his cabinet can vary and are entirely up to him. In the early days of the Federal Republic, the title was awarded frequently and for very different reasons. For example,Robert Tillmanns, one of the first two Ministers for Special Affairs, represented the federal government in theCouncil of Elders of the Bundestag. Other responsibilities delegated to different Ministers for Special Affairs included the middle class, water management, the Federal Defense Council or the affairs of theVice Chancellor of Germany. Since the 1960s, it has become customary for the head of the Chancellery to be integrated into the Cabinet in this way, even if this is still not obligatory (the head of the Chancellery can also be appointed at the lower rank of State Secretary, which was last done by Chancellor Gerhard Schröder in the case ofFrank-Walter Steinmeier [1999-2005]).

After the German reunification in 1990, the title was used to integrate some members of thefinal East German government into the cabinet, in order to provide a representation of theNew states of Germany in the federal government.

There is currently one Minister for Special Affairs,Thorsten Frei (since 6 May 2025), who is also Head of the Chancellery.

List of Federal Ministers for Special Affairs

[edit]

Political Party:  CSU  CDU  SPD  FDP  GB/BHE

PortraitName
(Birth–Death)
ResponsibilitiesTerm of OfficePolitical Party
Took officeLeft officeTime in office
1Franz Josef Strauß
(1915–1988)
N/A6 October 195312 October 19552 years, 6 daysChristian Social Union
2Robert Tillmanns
(1896–1955)
represented cabinet in theCouncil of Elders of the German Bundestag20 October 195312 November 1955
(died in office)
2 years, 23 daysChristian Democratic Union
3Waldemar Kraft
(1898–1977)
responsible for water management20 October 195312 October 19552 years, 23 daysAll-German Bloc/
League of Expellees and Deprived of Rights
4Hermann Schäfer
(1892–1966)
responsible for small and medium-sized businesses20 October 195316 October 19562 years, 362 daysFree Democratic Party
5Heinrich Krone
(1895–1989)
Federal Defense Council questions14 November 196130 November 19665 years, 16 daysChristian Democratic Union
6Ludger Westrick
(1894–1990)
Head of the Federal Chancellery16 June 196430 November 19662 years, 167 daysChristian Democratic Union
7Horst Ehmke
(1927–2017)
Head of the Federal Chancellery22 October 196915 December 19723 years, 54 daysSocial Democratic Party
8Werner Maihofer
(1918–2009)
Minister forVice-Chancellor's Affairs15 December 197216 May 19741 year, 152 daysFree Democratic Party
9Egon Bahr
(1922–2015)
Federal Minister in theFederal Chancellery15 December 197216 May 19741 year, 152 daysSocial Democratic Party
10Wolfgang Schäuble
(1942-2023)
Head of the Federal Chancellery15 November 198421 April 19894 years, 157 daysChristian Democratic Union
11Rudolf Seiters
(born 1937)
Head of the Federal Chancellery21 April 198926 November 19912 years, 219 daysChristian Democratic Union
12Hans Klein
(1931–1996)
government spokesman and head of the Press and Information Office of the Federal Government26 November 198920 December 19901 year, 24 daysChristian Social Union
13Lothar de Maizière
(born 1940)
afterGerman reunification3 October 199019 December 199077 daysChristian Democratic Union
14Sabine Bergmann-Pohl
(born 1946)
3 October 199017 January 1991106 daysChristian Democratic Union
15Günther Krause
(born 1953)
3 October 199017 January 1991106 daysChristian Democratic Union
16Rainer Ortleb
(born 1944)
3 October 199017 January 1991106 daysFree Democratic Party
17Hansjoachim Walther
(1939–2005)
3 October 199017 January 1991106 daysGerman Social Union
18Friedrich Bohl
(born 1945)
Head of the Federal Chancellery26 November 199127 October 19987 years, 283 daysChristian Democratic Union
19Bodo Hombach
(born 1952)
Head of the Federal Chancellery27 October 19987 July 1999253 daysSocial Democratic Party
20Thomas de Maizière
(born 1954)
Head of the Federal Chancellery22 November 200527 October 20093 years, 339 daysChristian Democratic Union
21Ronald Pofalla
(born 1959)
Head of the Federal Chancellery28 October 200917 December 20134 years, 50 daysChristian Democratic Union
22Peter Altmaier
(born 1958)
Head of the Federal Chancellery17 December 201314 March 20184 years, 87 daysChristian Democratic Union
23Helge Braun
(born 1972)
Head of the Federal Chancellery14 March 20188 December 20213 years, 269 daysChristian Democratic Union
24Wolfgang Schmidt
(born 1970)
Head of the Federal Chancellery8 December 20216 May 20253 years, 149 daysSocial Democratic Party
25Thorsten Frei
(born 1973)
Head of the Federal Chancellery6 May 2025Incumbent203 daysCDU
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