Misplaced Pages

Boris Rhein

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
German politician

Boris RheinMdL MdBR
Portrait of a middle-aged white man wearing a dark suit and glassesRhein in 2019
Minister-President of Hesse
Incumbent
Assumed office
31 May 2022
DeputyTarek Al-Wazir, Kaweh Mansoori
Preceded byVolker Bouffier
President of the Landtag of Hesse
In office
18 January 2019 – 31 May 2022
Preceded byNorbert Kartmann
Succeeded byAstrid Wallmann
Hessian Cabinet
Minister for Science and Art
In office
18 January 2014 – 17 January 2019
Minister-President
  • Volker Bouffier
Preceded byEva Kühne-Hörmann
Succeeded byAngela Dorn-Rancke
Minister for the Interior and Sport
In office
31 August 2010 – 18 January 2014
Minister-President
  • Volker Bouffier
Preceded byVolker Bouffier
Succeeded byPeter Beuth
State Secretary in the
Ministry of the Interior and Sport
In office
5 February 2009 – 31 August 2010Serving with Horst Westerfeld
Minister-PresidentRoland Koch
MinisterVolker Bouffier
Preceded byOda Scheibelhuber
Succeeded byWerner Koch
Landtag constituencies
Member of the
Landtag of Hesse
for Frankfurt am Main
Incumbent
Assumed office
18 January 2014
Preceded byGudrun Osterburg
ConstituencyFrankfurt am Main VI
In office
5 April 1999 – 14 July 2006
Preceded byHans Burggraf
Succeeded byHans-Dieter Schnell
ConstituencyFrankfurt am Main III
Personal details
Born (1972-01-02) 2 January 1972 (age 52)
Frankfurt am Main, Hesse, West Germany (now Germany)
Political partyChristian Democratic Union (1990–)
SpouseTanja Raab-Rhein
Children2
EducationGoethe University Frankfurt

Boris Rhein (born 2 January 1972) is a German lawyer and politician of the Christian Democratic Union (CDU) who has been serving as Minister-President of Hesse since 2022. He has been active in the politics of Hesse since the late 1990s. After being elected to the Landtag of Hesse in 1999, he served as the state's Minister for the Interior from 2010 until 2014 and as the Minister for Science and Art from 2014 to 2019. On 31 May 2022, he was elected to succeed Volker Bouffier as the Minister-President of Hesse. He led the CDU to a victory in the 2023 Hessian state election.

Early life and career

Rhein was born on 2 January 1972 in Frankfurt am Main. His father, Peter Rhein, headed a department at a local school. After obtaining his Abitur at Frankfurt's Lessing-Gymnasium, Rhein studied law at Goethe University Frankfurt from 1991 until 1997. From 2001 until 2006, he practiced as a lawyer in his hometown.

Political career

In 1990, Rhein joined Junge Union, the youth wing of the Christian Democratic Union of Germany (CDU), and served on organisation's state board from 1996 until 2002.

At the 1999 Hessian state election Rhein was elected to a seat in the Landtag of Hesse, which he occupied until 2006. He then returned to the state parliament at the 2013 Hessian state election. From 2008 to 2012, he led his party in the city of Frankfurt and ran to become its mayor in 2012, but lost to the social democrat Peter Feldmann. Feldmann would be ousted as Mayor by a recall election in the same year he became Minister-President.

Rhein was appointed a Staatssekretär in the Hessian State Ministry of Justice in 2009, but was soon promoted to Staate Minister of the Interior when the CDU-politician Volker Bouffier became the Minister-President of Hesse. His tenure was perceived as conservative by the German media: he endorsed state data retention and a harsher penal code in cases of violence against police officers. In 2014, he was moved to the position of Minister for Science and Art, a position he held until 2019. In the same year, he was elected President of the Hessian Landtag.

Minister-President of Hesse, 2022–present

In 2022, Volker Bouffier, the state's Minister-President and leader of the Hessian CDU, announced that he would vacate his office and designated Rhein as his successor. According to the German daily Süddeutsche Zeitung, he was chosen over Peter Beuth, the Minister of the Interior, Michael Boddenberg, the Minister of Finance, and Ines Claus [de], the party's leader in the state parliament, because of his standing with Alliance 90/The Greens, the CDU's coalition partner. He was elected to the office of Minister-President on 31 May 2022.

In his capacity as Minister-President, Rhein has been one of Hesse's representatives on the Bundesrat, where he serves on the Committee on Foreign Affairs and the Defence Committee.

In the 2023 Hessian state election, Rhein's CDU received 34.6% of the vote, remaining the larges party in the state parliament and increasing its share by 7.6%.

Other activities

Political positions

Even though Rhein was considered a conservative State Minister of the Interior, he rejected this description of his tenure by saying that the office required a rigid enforcement of the law. Citing sources within the party, Süddeutsche Zeitung writes that Rhein had acquired a more centrist profile in the aftermath of his defeat in the 2012 Frankfurt mayoral election.

Personal life

Rhein is married to Tanja Raab-Rhein, a judge and CDU activist. They have two sons, Oskar and Bruno. He lives in Frankfurt and is a member of the Catholic Church.

References

  1. ^ Walker 2022.
  2. ^ "Boris Rhein". Landtag of Hesse (in German). Retrieved 30 May 2022.
  3. ^ Niewel 2022.
  4. "CDU-Politiker Rhein zum neuen Ministerpräsidenten gewählt". Die Zeit (in German). 31 May 2022. Retrieved 31 May 2022.
  5. Boris Rhein Bundesrat.
  6. "Triumph für Rhein und AfD - Schlappe für SPD". tagesschau (in German). 9 October 2023.
  7. Foundation Board Fritz Bauer Institute.
  8. Board of Trustees Hessische Kulturstiftung.
  9. Board of Trustees House of Finance.
  10. Paul Ehrlich Foundation: Board of Trustees Goethe University Frankfurt.
  11. Board of Trustees Senckenberg Nature Research Society.

Bibliography

Political offices
Preceded byVolker Bouffier Minister-President of Hesse
2022–
Succeeded byIncumbent
Minister-presidents of Hesse
People's State of Hesse (est. 1918) Coat of arms of Hesse
Nazi period (1933–45)
Greater Hesse (1945–46)
Modern Hesse (since 1946)
Current heads of government of the states of Germany
States
Categories: