Former Bundestag President Wolfgang Schäuble is dead. The CDU politician fell asleep peacefully at home with his family on Tuesday evening around 8 p.m., the family told the German Press Agency.

Schäuble died after a long, serious illness. In his political career he was a minister, CDU leader, parliamentary group leader and President of the German Bundestag. Nobody has been a member of Parliament longer than him.

Schäuble was born on September 18, 1942 in Freiburg. He studied law, but was drawn to politics early on. He joined the CDU in 1965. In 1972 he won a mandate for the Bundestag for the first time, where he served without interruption until his death.

Federal President Frank-Walter Steinmeier praised Schäuble as a “stroke of luck for German history.” “With Wolfgang Schäuble we have lost a great person and passionate politician who achieved historic things for our country,” Steinmeier wrote to the widow Ingeborg Schäuble. “A rich life has now come to an end – the work of this outstanding statesman and person will endure. We will not forget Wolfgang Schäuble. He has rendered outstanding services to Germany and Europe.”

Schäuble was visionary and he never lost sight of what was important, says Steinmeier’s condolence letter. “Wolfgang Schäuble pursued the goal of the unity of our country just as persistently as the growing together of Europe.” For him, the unity of Germany and Europe always belonged together. “He worked persistently for this.” His commitment and foresight in drawing up the international treaties led to German unity being completed.

Mourning in the Union

The CDU chairman Friedrich Merz reacts with dismay to Schäuble’s death. The news fills him with great sadness, writes Merz on the platform X (formerly Twitter). “With Wolfgang Schäuble, I am losing my closest friend and advisor that I have ever had in politics. My thoughts are with his family, especially his wife Ingeborg.”

Former Chancellor Angela Merkel also reacted “with great dismay” to the death of her long-time political companion. “With him, Germany is losing an outstanding personality with political and programmatic foresight,” Merkel said in a statement. “We will miss Wolfgang Schäuble’s voice in Germany, and I will personally miss his advice.” He had the ability to recognize and shape major political developments far beyond the day.

“It was not just Wolfgang Schäuble’s intellect and discipline that were outstanding, but also his deep respect for democratic discourse and his ability to constantly get involved in new things,” writes EU Commission President Ursula von der Leyen on Platform X.

CDU federal treasurer Julia Klöckner said Schäuble’s death gave pause and made people sad. “Wolfgang Schäuble was an exceptional person, an impressive thinker and speaker, a loyal and critical colleague. He shaped our country as a minister, as President of the Bundestag, as a politician who conscientiously fulfilled his duty and service.”

Bavaria’s Prime Minister Markus Söder writes on Platform X that Schäuble has “made great contributions to Germany.” “The CSU will honor his memory.”

CSU regional group leader Alexander Dobrindt explained: “With Wolfgang Schäuble, Germany is losing a great parliamentarian who has made outstanding contributions to this country for decades.” German unity, European unification and many groundbreaking decisions remained forever linked to his name.

Green Party leader pays tribute to Schäuble

The Green Party leadership also praised Schäuble as a defining political figure in Germany. “He was a giant of parliamentarism and a defining figure for our country for decades. His place in the history books is certain,” wrote party leader Omid Nouripour on Platform X.

The Green party leaders Katharina Dröge and Britta Haßelmann said they had great respect for Schäuble’s impressive commitment as a member of the German Bundestag. “His work has shaped this country. We thank him for his impressive commitment to our parliamentarism and our democracy.”

Career under Kohl

Decades of German politics are associated with the name Schäuble. Under Chancellor Helmut Kohl (CDU), he was initially head of the Federal Chancellery and Federal Minister for Special Tasks, and from 1989 to 1991 Federal Minister of the Interior. Schäuble helped negotiate the unification treaty in the GDR after the fall of the Berlin Wall. Since the assassination attempt on him by a mentally disturbed man in October 1990, Schäuble has been in a wheelchair, but his political career has continued. From 1991 to 2000 he led the CDU/CSU parliamentary group. After the Union lost power in 1998, Schäuble became party leader as part of the CDU’s realignment. Angela Merkel became Secretary General.

In the turmoil of the CDU donations affair and after statements about a 100,000 mark cash donation, Schäuble resigned as CDU leader in February 2000. Merkel became party leader, and in 2005, as chancellor, she made Schäuble interior minister, and four years later, finance minister. Schäuble held the office for two electoral terms; he created the “black zero”, i.e. a federal budget without new debts.

Second highest office in the state: President of the Bundestag

After the 2017 federal election, Schäuble was elected President of the Bundestag, the second highest office in the state, as the successor to Norbert Lammert. Schäuble was denied the highest office in the state, that of Federal President.

After the 2021 federal election, which the Union lost, Schäuble withdrew from the leadership committees. In the Bundestag, the SPD politician Bärbel Bas became president, and Schäuble was now a member of parliament. In his speech as Senior President – the MP with the most years of service – he promoted open discourse and self-confident MPs.

In his party, Schäuble was one of the conservative politicians; behind the scenes, his words always carried weight. On the other hand, he had earlier than others called on the CDU to be open to alliances with the Greens. As early as 2007, he told the “Frankfurter Allgemeine Sonntagszeitung”: “Black-green is not our wish, but it is an option for the Union.” In the struggle for the 2021 candidacy for chancellor, Schäuble sided with the then CDU leader Armin Laschet and opposed CSU leader Markus Söder.

Politics also often played a role in Schäuble’s private life. Father Karl Schäuble was already a CDU politician and a member of the Baden state parliament. Schäuble’s younger brother Thomas was also a politician; he was state minister in Baden-Württemberg for 13 years. He died in 2013 as a result of a heart attack. The top CDU politician Thomas Strobl was Wolfgang Schäuble’s son-in-law, daughter Christine, the ARD program director, and Strobl’s wife. Schäuble leaves behind a total of four children and his wife Ingeborg, to whom he was married since 1969.