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Rita Süssmuth, trailblazer in German politics, dies aged 88

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Rita Süssmuth, trailblazer in German politics, dies aged 88
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Why it matters

She dared to break taboos, advocated for women's rights and took part in a failed attempt to oust Chancellor Helmut Kohl as chairman of the CDU.

Key takeaways

  • Former President of the German Bundestag Rita Süssmuth has died aged 88.
  • Opposition was forming within her party, the conservative Christian Democratic Union (CDU), against Helmut Kohl, who at the time had been party chairman for 16 years and German chancellor for seven.
  • Despite this, Kohl was able to secure enough support and was reelected at a party conference with 77% of the delegates' votes.

German Chancellor Friedrich Merz paid tribute to Rita Süssmuth as a "great politician" and a "guiding light for our democratic society."

Süssmuth died on Sunday, less than two weeks before she would have turned 89.

As a federal minister and president of the German Bundestag during the 1980s and 90s, Süssmuth had been "a role model and a pioneer, not least for gender equality and the political influence of women," Merz said.

He stressed that she'd fought for a modern and open society and set standards for tolerance and openness to the world.

Rebel against Helmut Kohl

TL;DR: Süssmuth was a politician who helped shape significant developments in Germany's modern history.

Süssmuth was a politician who helped shape significant developments in Germany's modern history. She passed her first political endurance test in 1989. Opposition was forming within her party, the conservative Christian Democratic Union (CDU), against Helmut Kohl, who at the time had been party chairman for 16 years and German chancellor for seven.

A group came together aiming to vote out Kohl as CDU chairman and Rita Süssmuth was among them. Despite this, Kohl was able to secure enough support and was reelected at a party conference with 77% of the delegates' votes. Those who had conspired against him were sidelined.

Even then, one of Rita Süssmuth's qualities was clear: her toughness. In contrast to other Kohl opponents, she withstood the conflict unharmed and remained Bundestag president until the end of the Kohl era in 1998.

Friends became opponents

TL;DR: Kohl viewed it as a betrayal that of all people, the woman he had originally promoted in a calculated political power-play to moderately reform the party for the future had turned against him.

But the rift persisted. Kohl viewed it as a betrayal that of all people, the woman he had originally promoted in a calculated political power-play to moderately reform the party for the future had turned against him.

Even before that, it had bothered him that Süssmuth, as minister for womens' and family affairs, was pushing ahead with modernization all too briskly for his liking. Kohl feared that the party could become overwhelmed.

Süssmuth, on the other hand, felt let down by the chancellor in the battle against the conservative wing of the party.

Help for addicts and AIDS patients

TL;DR: Born in Wuppertal in 1937, she pursued Romance studies and history in Münster, Tübingen and Paris and later also studied educational science, sociology, and psychology.

Süssmuth was a lawmaker in the Bundestag until 2002. Born in Wuppertal in 1937, she pursued Romance studies and history in Münster, Tübingen and Paris and later also studied educational science, sociology, and psychology. She joined the CDU in 1981. Only four years later she became the federal minister for youth, family, and health (from 1986 also minister for women), even though at that point she was largely an unknown in politics.

Right from the beginning, the woman with the distinctive short hairstyle and rectangular glasses did not shy away from confrontations with the conservative forces in the bloc of the CDU and its Bavarian sister party, the Christian Social Union (CSU). To them she had the effect of a red rag to a bull. Nevertheless, she was able to achieve a lot for the issues closest to her heart.

For example, for the treatment of AIDS sufferers. Süssmuth prevailed in giving priority to education and medical help. In 1987 the Catholic politician launched the AIDS Foundation. In drug policy, she advocated for leniency toward addicts and toughness against dealers.

Punishing rape within marriage

TL;DR: Süssmuth also advocated for moderate policies on the issue of abortion and played a key role in criminalizing marital rape.

Süssmuth also advocated for moderate policies on the issue of abortion and played a key role in criminalizing marital rape.

In a television talk show on German public broadcaster ARD in April 2017, she described the atmosphere in which this had to be pushed through in Germany — after a struggle that had lasted more than 25 years: "First of all, the family was so sacred that it was claimed that there was no such thing [as rape within marriage]. Secondly, it was claimed that the state had no business in people's bedrooms. These were all clumsy arguments, because outside of marriage the offense was punishable, within marriage it was not. How's that for dealing with human dignity and human rights?"

As president of the Bundestag she organized moving the parliament from Bonn to Berlin. She continually campaigned for good relations between Germany and Poland and for a modern immigration policy.

This she continued to do even after Gerhard Schröder of the rival Social Democrats (SPD) took over from Helmut Kohl as chancellor in 1998. To the ire of her party, she took up the presidency of the Immigration Commission that Schröder's SPD-Greens coalition government had offered her.

No regrets despite loneliness

TL;DR: In all the positions she held, women's rights and the balance of family and career were a central concern.

In all the positions she held, women's rights and the balance of family and career were a central concern. Within the CDU, Süssmuth was a bridge-builder for feminism. "We managed to bring a different way of thinking into the party. That took a long time," she once said.

"Today these things are taken for granted, but they used to be anything but. A few decades ago, the emancipation of women was still considered to be the downfall of civilized society — also in the CDU." Süssmuth may have even made it a little easier for Angela Merkel to become chancellor.

The widowed mother of one daughter was an advocate for adult education. Though the persuasive politician always had to overcome high hurdles, even she sometimes stumbled, she told the Süddeutsche Zeitung newspaper several years ago.

"I have experienced rejection in my party, I felt like a stranger many times, but I also received support," she said. "I often felt lonely. And I know that this is not just true for me; this applies to many people in politics. Despite this, I have not regretted going into politics. We can change something — not the world, but minds and actions."  

This article was originally published in German.

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Curated by Fatima Al-Hassan

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Published: Feb 1, 2026

Read time: 4 min

Category: World