Waltraud Schoppe
Waltraud Schoppe has served as a teacher and politician in Germany. She left school at a young age and worked as a secretary, later marrying and earning a teaching certificate. She became involved in university politics and the anti-nuclear and women's movements in the 1970s. A founding member of the West German Green Party, she made a taboo-breaking speech in the Bundestag in 1983 on the subject of abortion and marital rape, challenging for the first time the sexism women encountered in the legislature. She was one of the members of the first all-woman party directorates in Germany, when the Green Party elected six women to head the party in 1984.
Schoppe served in the 10th, 11th, and 13th legislative terms. In her first two terms she worked on social legislation, such as decriminalizing abortion, child protection laws, and anti-violence measures, but she opposed the anti-pornography movement on the basis that its use was a personal decision. She was one of the leaders of the Realo faction of the West German Greens and supported the red–green alliance with the Social Democrats. Between 1990 and 1994, she served as the first Women's Affairs Minister of Lower Saxony and then returned to the Bundestag between 1994 and 1998. In her final term in parliament, she focused primarily on foreign affairs, supporting the rights of nations to self-determination and the development of refugee policies protecting human rights. In 1997, marital rape, an issue she had first introduced to the Bundestag, became a criminal offense. Schoppe retired from politics in 1998 and became an antiques dealer.
Early life and education
Waltraud Sobanek was born on 27 June 1942 in Bremen-Aumund, Germany. Her father was an aircraft engineer and her mother owned and operated a grocery store. Her mother died around 1958, causing Sobanek to leave school after the 10th grade and train as a secretary. Sobanek married in the early 1960s and had two sons, Willy and Philip Schoppe in 1965 and 1967, before divorcing. She raised her children alone in the countryside around Diepholz. She passed her abitur examination in 1969, and decided to train as a teacher. Between 1973 and 1979, she studied German and history at the University of Bremen and was active in university politics, women's groups and anti-nuclear initiatives. Among the initiatives she was involved in were creation of a child care center and bicycle paths in Bremen. At the completion of her studies, she passed the state examination to teach high school. Schoppe taught as a teacher-trainee at the gymnasium in Oldenburg in 1982.Career
Political involvement (1979–1985)
Schoppe was one of the founders in 1979 of the Green Party faction in Diepholz, which favored environmental protection and opposed war. She served as chair of the local branch. When the Greens first won seats in the Bundestag in 1983, she was selected to represent Lower Saxony and moved to Bonn. When the Green Party formed, two-year term limits were placed on both officers and sitting representatives. Schoppe's first term in office was from 1983 to 1985. On 5 May 1983, in her first presentation in the Bundestag, Schoppe delivered a speech "Women, Abortion, and Marital Rape" during the legislative debates to revise paragraph 218, the West German Abortion Law, of the criminal code. In the speech, she pointed out that legislating abortion allowed politicians, who were mostly male, to make health care decisions for women. She observed that making abortion illegal punished only the woman who was pregnant, not the man who was equally responsible for the pregnancy. Based on this, she argued that abortion should not be a legal matter, but left to a woman's moral convictions. She also encouraged legislation which had harsh penalties for marital rape. Her speech was met with "demeaning insults, jeers, and jokes" from members of the other political parties, and general disapproval by the "male-dominated ranks of the traditional parties". Schoppe's address marked the first time that patriarchy and sexism had been challenged in the parliament and that taboo-topics dealing with sexuality had been openly addressed in the legislature.Schoppe was appointed to serve as a deputy member on the Committee for Economic Affairs and the Committee for Labor and Social Order. She was a full member of the Committee for Youth, Family and Health. Her first term in office was marked by her advocacy for women's equality, elimination of the criminalization of abortion, and legislation which addressed family violence and protected children. In April 1984, Schoppe was elected to serve on the directorate of the Green Party, along with, Heidemarie Dann,, Christa Nickels, and Antje Vollmer. Schoppe and Vollmer served as the speakers in the Bundestag with Borgmann as their successor. Nickels served as the party's whip, and Dann and Hickel were appointed as her deputies. It was the first time in Germany that any political party had elected an all-woman board to lead the party. The group was hopeful that other parties would follow suit or that women from across the political spectrum could unite on issues and work together. Schoppe favored more transparency from and compromise between politicians to promote a robust democracy. She also supported parliamentary reforms and backed the creation of an independent body with oversight for Bundestag policies. Because of the rotation system, Schoppe was forced to resign her seat in 1985. At the party conference preceding the next election cycle, she advocated for party reforms, including abandonment of the rotation system, which was adopted for Lower Saxony in 1986.
11th Bundestag session (1987–1990)
Schoppe was elected to a second term in office in 1987, for a full four-year period, and returned to her appointment on the Committee for Youth, Family and Health. Alice Schwarzer through her magazine EMMA began a campaign, "PorNo" in 1987, to protect women from exploitation by the sex industry, to strengthen the ban on violent pornography, and allow women to privately sue pornography producers. When the Bundestag debated changing pornography laws the following year, Schoppe opposed the anti-porn movement on the basis that use of pornography was a personal decision and that films might be deemed innocuous or offensive depending on the viewer. From 1988, she served on the four-member Children's Commission of the Bundestag. The commission had no authority to veto legislation, but could recommend legislation and advise if proposed legislation complied with the principle of the "best interests of the child". One of their first lobbying efforts concerned establishing speed limits for urban areas. Other issues on their agenda were changes to guardianship laws to protect the rights for children in foster care and liability legislation to prevent owners from dodging responsibility for endangering a child merely by posting a sign that danger existed or that land was restricted. They also planned focus on addressing child labor, substance abuse, violence against children, and children's mental health.Along with Joschka Fischer,, and Otto Schily, she was a leader in the Realo faction of the Green Party, which favored collaboration with the Social Democratic Party and recognized that to support the rights of nations to self-determination meant that they had to be able to defend themselves. Unlike some of her colleagues, she did not favor German withdrawal from NATO, but was in support of curtailing the presence of nuclear weapons throughout Europe. A wave of protest against antisemitism in Germany had begun in 1985, prompting discussion in the party on its policies and its stance toward Israel. In early 1987, Palestinian refugee camps were attacked by the Shia Amal militia, prompting the executive board of the Greens to issue a statement that they supported Palestinians' right to self-determination and the formation of an independent state under the leadership of the Palestine Liberation Organization. The sitting politicians, including Schoppe, concerned that the statement did not address the question of Israel, drafted their own statement taking a more cautious approach toward the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, which acknowledged Palestinians' right to self-determination with Israeli cooperation. Schily and Schoppe, along with met with Israeli president Chaim Herzog in Germany in April and again in Israel in October, hoping to encourage investigation of Israeli human rights abuses, recognition of Palestinian rights, and support for Israel. The trip brought the Green Party to the edge of a split.
In 1988, Schoppe and campaigned for the creation of mothers' centers to help reduce the isolation many mothers experienced. They proposed establishing centers which allowed women to socialize and engage in unpaid or low-paid activities to relieve their social alienation. She also was instrumental in introducing and supporting a change in the maternal leave law to convert the legislation into a parental leave policy which included fathers receiving eight weeks of protected family leave. Schoppe said that, as proposed, the legislation only included married couples, but that it was hoped it could be extended to other partnerships in the future. The measure failed to gain support from her male colleagues. When German reunification talks began, the West German Greens favored the idea of the two countries remaining separate, fearing that a unified Germany would be seen as a threat to other Europeans. As a result, the party lost all of their parliamentary seats in the 1990 elections, but Alliance 90, the East German green party, won eight seats in parliament.
Women's Minister (1990–1994)
Gerhard Schröder became Minister-President of Lower Saxony and head of the Red–green alliance, a coalition of the Social Democrats and Greens, in 1990. He chose Monika Griefahn and Schoppe, respectively, to serve as State Minister of the Environment and State Minister of Women's Affairs. Schoppe became the first person to serve as the women's affairs minister for Lower Saxony. According to academic and politician, Rita Süssmuth, she built the largest state ministry on women in the country. Schoppe was known for networking across party lines and with other state women's departments to address women's issues. Among the programs she introduced were initiatives to provide women with legal services, to support women's shelters, to assist women who were entrepreneurs and farmers, and to create family planning centers to help mothers and children. At the state level she worked to pass legislation requiring women to make up half of the public service work force and to establish outpatient abortion services. She also worked to create national coordination offices for parental leave policies and mediation, which included career planning and training to enable returning mothers to be ready for re-employment.In 1992, the unified German Bundestag had passed legislation to resolve differences in abortion laws between East Germany, where abortion was legal in the first twelve weeks of pregnancy, and West Germany, where it was illegal except in the case of rape, social hardship, or for medical reasons. The compromise legislation, which allowed abortion within the first trimester if performed by a physician after mandatory pro-life counseling, was sent to the Constitutional Court, in 1993. The court ruled that the law was unconstitutional because it failed to protect the life of the unborn child, and declared abortion to be illegal, but unpunishable. The court declared that only in the case of medical emergency, fetal deformity, or rape, could a physician perform an abortion after mandatory counseling and that health insurance could not pay for the procedure without the doctor's consent. The only concession to women's arguments in favor of abortion was acknowledgment that the choice to obtain an abortion was the woman's decision. Schoppe refused to accept the ruling, and not only attacked the court's decision, vowing to continue the fight, but argued that the 1974 legislation itself had been designed to mitigate abuses of sterilization and abortion which had been hallmarks of the earlier fascist regime. She pointed out that "women were neither the perpetrators of that regime, intent on exterminating whole peoples, nor would their individual decisions to terminate a pregnancy augur a return to totalitarianism".