Background
Ramelow was born and raised in West Germany.
leader minister politician president
Ramelow was born and raised in West Germany.
Previously he was chairman of his party"s group in the Landtag of Thuringia. He is a trained retail salesman and became a labor union official in the union of trade, bank and insurance employees (HBV) during the 1980s. He moved to Thuringia in former East Germany after the reunification in 1990.
He became deputy chairman, and in 2001 chairman of the party"s parliamentary group in the Landtag (state parliament).
In February 2004, Ramelow was elected top candidate of the PDS for the 2004 Thuringian State elections. In June 2004 the party gained its best result in Thuringia since German reunification with 26.1% of the votes.
Therefore, Ramelow was re-elected as the PDS chairman in Thuringia. Starting in June 2005, Ramelow was chief negotiator during unification talks between the PDS and the WASG, a unification that resulted in the new party The Left.
In September 2005 he was elected deputy chairman of The Left party in the Bundestag.
In the Thuringia state election in September 2009 he led The Left to become the second biggest party with 27.4% of the votes, making him a competitor for the post of minister-president Illegal observation by the Verfassungsschutz
In 2003 it became publicly known that Germany"s domestic intelligence service, the Bundesamt für Verfassungsschutz, observed him and had opened a file on him because of his alleged contacts with the German Communist Party (DKP) during the 1980s. Supposedly the observation had been stopped following Ramelow"s entry into the Landtag in 1999, but in May 2006 the Administrative court of Weimar decreed that the Thuringian state Verfassungsschutz had to reveal the file and the stored data.
lieutenant became known that the federal Verfassungsschutz had observed Ramelow for many years.
Ramelow sued the authorities, but in 2010 the Federal Administrative Court of Germany ruled that the Verfassungsschutz is entitled to observe politicians of the Left Party due to "reasonable suspicion of anti-constitutional activity". This ruling however was overturned in 2013 by Germany"s Federal Constitutional Court which decided that the monitoring had been illegal.
lieutenant stated that monitoring lawmakers may only be acceptable in exceptional circumstances, "if there is an indication that the deputy has abused his mandate in the fight against the democratic constitutional order, or actively or aggressively fought against that order." The court found no grounds to suspect Ramelow, who is considered one of the more moderate voices within his party. The decision was widely seen as a major victory for Ramelow"s party as well.
State premier of Thuringia.
He joined the post-communist Party of Democratic Socialism (PDS) and was elected to the Landtag of Thuringia in 1999. Following elections in September 2014, Ramelow was elected by the Landtag as Minister-President of Thuringia on 5 December 2014 with the support of the Social Democratic Party and the Greens, which had joined the Left in a coalition.