Markus Ulbig

Markus Ulbig
Saxon Minister of the Interior
Assumed office
September 2009
Mayor of Pirna
In office
2001–2009
Personal details
Born (1964-04-01) April 1, 1964
Zinnwald near Altenberg
Citizenship German
Political party Christian Democratic Union (CDU)
Website www.markus-ulbig.de

Markus Ulbig (born 1 April 1964 in Zinnwald near Altenberg, Saxony) is a German politician and member of the Christian Democratic Union of Germany (CDU). He worked in Pirna, became its mayor in 2001, and has been Minister of Interior of the German federal state of Saxony since 2009.

Biography

Born and raised in East Germany, Ulbig finished training as an electronics technician and worked in that field until 1990. After German reunification, he joined the Christian Democratic Union and was hired as the personal assistant of the mayor of Pirna, in the region of Saxon Switzerland. He studied in Dresden and Zittau for a Bachelor of Business Administration.

On 1 August 2001, Ulbig was elected mayor of Pirna. After a number of incidents to counter the rise of Neo-Nazism Ulbig became the honorary patron of the Pirnaer Initiative against extremism and for civil courage. The initiatives helped to restore tourism.[1] Since January 2005 Ulbig has also been a member of the anti-nuclear weapons movement Mayors for Peace[2]

On 8 June 2008, Ulbig was reelected mayor of Pirna. Only 4 months later he was appointed Minister of the Interior of Saxony. In 2012, Ulbig received a German Big Brother Award for requesting the mass surveillance of over 55,000 cellular phones gathering over a million call detail records, when on 19 Februar 2011 some 20,000 antifascists gathered to protest against the annual neo-Nazi march in Dresden.[3]

In the Saxony state election, 2014, Ulbig was elected a member of the Landtag of Saxony, and in November 2014, he was nominated as a candidate in the election for Dresden's mayorship in June 2015.[4]

External links

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Markus Ulbig.

References

  1. Heitkamp, Sven (18 March 2008). "Neonazi-Hochburg wehrt sich gegen Extremisten". Die Welt (in German). Retrieved 22 January 2015.
  2. Markus Ulbig auf den Seiten von Mayors for Peace, abgerufen am 24. September 2009
  3. Bowe, Rebecca (11 May 2012). "And the Privacy Invasion Award Goes To…". Electronic Frontier Foundation. Retrieved 22 January 2015.
  4. "Dresdner Oberbürgermeisterin Helma Orosz tritt im Februar zurück – nun kandidiert Ulbig". Dresdner Neueste Nachrichten (in German). 17 November 2014. Retrieved 22 January 2015.
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