Education
As a teenager he studied to be an electrician in the employ of the West-German Bundesbahn. He married in 1972, and moved to Frankfurt am Main where he studied history and education for a time at Johann Wolfgang Goethe University.
politician Member of the Hessian Parliament
As a teenager he studied to be an electrician in the employ of the West-German Bundesbahn. He married in 1972, and moved to Frankfurt am Main where he studied history and education for a time at Johann Wolfgang Goethe University.
He is a self-described "Marxist". Van Ooyen is the oldest of seven children. He was certainly in the thick of the so-called "68 Generation.
This organisation was mainly founded by East Germany.
He became affiliated with the new socialist party in Germany, Die Linke, in 2007, and was nominated as their candidate for minister-president in the 2008 Hessian state election. A few weeks after election day, she was tempted to go for a Social Democratic Party of Germany–Green coalition supported by The Left but under opposition from Member of Parliament Dagmar Metzger (Social Democratic Party of Germany) decided not to renege on her promise not to pursue such a venue.
After a second unsuccessful attempt by Ypsilanti to take power, all parties agreed to dissolve the Landtag and call for early elections on January 18, 2009. In the uproar in 2008, many German commentators played up the fact that the German Peace Union, of which vanOoyen was a longtime member and eventual federal leader, had been guided, advised, and financed by the East German communist government.
The communist government had showered praise upon the German Peace Union while it still existed, and heavily funded it during the van Ooyen years and earlier.
In the mid-1960s when he was a teenager, van Ooyen started his lifelong affiliation with various far-left political groupings and causes. In organized politics, his first major position was Hessian leader of the Marxist German Peace Union (Deutsche Friedensunion, DFU) as managing director—a partial successor of the banned Communist Party of Germany — in 1976. The GPU was always a minor party, and it changed its status to "political union" in 1984, the same year that Willi van Ooyen became federal leader of the party across the whole of West Germany.
The reason for the Hessian political crisis of 2008 (See Landtag of Hesse) was fundamentally the existence of the Linke bloc in the Landtag. Andrea Ypsilanti, leader of the Social Democratic Party of Germany, had promised several times during the electoral campaign not to work together with the new leftist party Die Linke (The Left).
Van Ooyen defended his status as a beneficiary of communist funds in the 1970s–1980s by saying he was "naive".