The Federal Ministry for Labour and Social Affairs (BMAS) is a
federal ministry of the
Federal Republic of Germany headed by the Federal Minister of Labour and Social Affairs as a member of the
Cabinet of Germany (''Bundesregierung''). Its first location is on
Wilhelmstrasse in
Berlin, the second in
Bonn.
History
The
Reich Ministry of Labour of the
Weimar Republic was established on 13 February 1919 as the successor of the Labour Office (''Reichsarbeitsamt'') of the
German Empire. The
Social Democratic politician
Gustav Bauer became the first Minister for Labour under Chancellor
Philipp Scheidemann, whom he succeeded on June 21 of the same year. On the day of the ''
Machtergreifung'' in January 1933, the
German National politician and ''
Der Stahlhelm'' leader
Franz Seldte was appointed Minister for Labour in the
Cabinet Hitler, a position he officially held until 1945, though without actual power.
The
West German Ministry for Labour was re-established in
Bonn on 20 September 1949 with the
Cabinet Adenauer I. According to the 1991
Berlin/Bonn Act it moved to its present seat in Berlin-
Mitte in 2000, on premises formerly used by Goebbels'
Propaganda Ministry and the East German
National Front organisation.
During the
Cabinet Schröder II from 2002 to 2005, the ministry had been dissolved and its responsibilities allocated to the
Federal Ministry for Economics and Labour and the
Federal Ministry of Health and Social Security. Responsibilities were re-allocated once again when a new government was formed under Chancellor
Angela Merkel following the
Bundestag elections of 2005. The German name was changed from ''Bundesministerium für Arbeit und Sozialordnung'' to ''Bundesministerium für Arbeit und Soziales''.
Ministers
Reich Ministers
Political Party:
Federal Ministers
Political Party:
State secretaries
The
Parliamentary Secretary of States are
Klaus Brandner and
Franz Thönnes.
The
Secretaries of State are
Detlef Scheele,
Franz-Josef Lersch-Mense and
Kajo Wasserhövel.
[as of April 2008]
Notes
External links
Official Web site
{{DEFAULTSORT:Federal Ministry Of Labour And Social Affairs (Germany)
Labour And Social Affairs
Germany, Labour And Social Affairs
Germany, Labour And Social Affairs
Germany, Labour And Social Affairs
Germany, Labour And Social Affairs
Category:German labour law