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Ute Granold
Ute Granold
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Ute Granold (born March 2, 1955, in Mainz) is a German politician and member of the Christian Democratic Union of Germany (CDU). She was a member of the German Bundestag from 2002 to 2013, where she was most recently the chairwoman of the CDU/CSU parliamentary group in the Committee on Human Rights and Humanitarian Aid.

Key Information

Education

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After graduating from the Maria-Ward-Schule in Mainz in 1973, Ute Granold studied law at the Johannes Gutenberg University in Mainz and passed the first state law examination in 1978. After the subsequent legal clerkship, she also passed the second state examination in 1982 and was admitted to the bar.[1] From 1984 to 2001, she was a lecturer at the German Armed Forces College in Mainz.

Political career

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Ute Granold joined the Young Union (German: Junge Union) and the CDU as a schoolgirl in 1972. She is also involved in the Working Group of Christian Democratic Lawyers, the Women Union (Organization of all female members of the CDU, German: Frauen Union) and the Local Politics Association of the CDU and CSU. She is a member of the Berliner Kreis, an informal conservative group within the CDU consisting of realignment skepticism in era Merkel.[2][3]

She has been a member of the Klein-Winternheim municipal council since 1984 and of the Mainz-Bingen district council since 1994. From 1996 to 2002, Granold was also a member of the state parliament of Rhineland-Palatinate.[4] There, she was the spokeswoman for women's policy and most recently also the legal advisor to the CDU parliamentary group in the state parliament.

From 2002 to 2013, she was a member of the German Bundestag.[5] Here she was a member of the Legal Affairs Committee and spokeswoman on family law issues for the Legal Affairs Working Group of the CDU/CSU parliamentary group. She was also a member of the Committee on Human Rights and Humanitarian Aid and rapporteur for the CDU/CSU parliamentary group on the issues of women, children, youth, human trafficking and the regions of the Balkans and Latin America. She also represented the parliamentary group in the Foreign Office's Humanitarian Aid Coordination Committee.

In 2006 and 2007, she delivered her parliamentary group's speeches in the Bundestag on the amendment to the Civil Partnership Act proposed by Alliance 90/The Greens and the FDP. In 2006, she held out the prospect that the CDU/CSU would be willing to talk about better tax treatment for registered civil partners. In 2007, however, she defended the behavior of her parliamentary group, which had postponed any debate on the subject in committee, on the grounds that other amendments that had already come into force in 2005 might not be constitutional. A corresponding evaluation by the Federal Constitutional Court is still pending. It is not intended to anticipate this.

Granold entered the Bundestag in 2002 and 2005 on the state list for Rhineland-Palatinate. In the 2009 federal election, she won the direct mandate, beating Michael Hartmann of the SPD in the Mainz constituency. Granold did not run again for the 2013 Bundestag election.[6]

Ute Granold has been a member of the advisory board of the Federal Association of Oriental Christians of Germany (ZOCD) and a member of the board of trustees of the German Institute for Human Rights since 2016.[7]

Granold has been mayor of Klein-Winternheim, her place of residence, since 1990. She was last re-elected for a five-year term in the 2019 local elections.[8] Granold was a member of the Board of Trustees of the Fridtjof Nansen Academy for Political Education until she left the German Bundestag in 2013.

References

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from Grokipedia
Ute Granold is a German politician and lawyer known for her service as a member of the German Bundestag for the Christian Democratic Union (CDU) from 2002 to 2013 and her 34-year tenure as Ortsbürgermeisterin of Klein-Winternheim. She was directly elected to represent the Mainz constituency in Rhineland-Palatinate and maintained a parallel career as a practicing attorney specializing in family law. Born on March 2, 1955, in Mainz, Granold completed her Abitur in 1973 and studied law thereafter, establishing her own law practice focused on family law while engaging in politics. A Roman Catholic, married, and mother of two children, she balanced her Bundestag responsibilities—including roles related to legal and committee work—with local governance and her legal profession for decades. After concluding her national parliamentary service in 2013 to focus more on her law practice, Granold continued as mayor of Klein-Winternheim until stepping down, earning honorary citizenship (Ehrenbürgerin) of the town in 2024 in recognition of her long-standing contributions to local community and administration.

Early life

Birth and family

Ute Granold was born on 2 March 1955 in Mainz, Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany. She was born under the birth name Ute Leist. Her maiden name reflects her family origin before marriage. Granold grew up in the Rhineland-Palatinate region, though specific details about her immediate family, such as parents or siblings, are not widely documented in public sources. She later married and took the surname Granold, with family life referenced briefly in relation to her personal background.

Education

Ute Granold obtained her Abitur from the Maria-Ward-Gymnasium in Mainz in 1973. She then pursued legal studies at the Johannes Gutenberg University Mainz from 1973 to 1978, culminating in her successful completion of the first state law examination (Erstes juristisches Staatsexamen) in 1978. Following her Referendariat (legal traineeship), Granold passed the second state law examination (Zweites juristisches Staatsexamen) in 1982, after which she was admitted to the bar and licensed as a Rechtsanwältin (attorney at law) in the same year. This qualification marked the completion of her formal legal education and enabled her entry into professional practice.

Professional career

Ute Granold passed the second state examination in 1982 and was admitted as a Rechtsanwältin the same year. She has operated as a self-employed lawyer in her own firm since that time, maintaining an independent legal practice throughout much of her professional life. Her practice has specialized in family law (Familienrecht), an area in which she has worked for over three decades in her private Kanzlei. She continued this legal work concurrently with her teaching role at the Bundeswehrfachschule in Mainz from 1984 to 2001. Listings in professional directories confirm her ongoing activity in family law, including related fields such as divorce and maintenance matters.

Teaching position

Ute Granold held a teaching position as a Dozentin (lecturer) at the Bundeswehrfachschule in Mainz from 1984 to 2001. This vocational training institution of the German Federal Armed Forces provided professional education for military personnel. During this period, she combined her lecturing duties with her established career as a self-employed lawyer. Specific details on the subjects she taught are not documented in available official biographies, though her background in law suggests relevance to legal or administrative topics within the military context. She concluded this role in 2001 after 17 years of service.

Political career

Local and early involvement

Ute Granold joined the Young Union and the Christian Democratic Union (CDU) in 1972 while still a school student. Her engagement at the municipal level began in 1984 when she was elected to the Gemeinderat (municipal council) of Klein-Winternheim, her home community, a position she held continuously thereafter. In 1990, she assumed the office of honorary mayor (ehrenamtliche Ortsbürgermeisterin) of Klein-Winternheim after her predecessor fell ill, initially taking over mid-term with the intention of serving only about six months. She was re-elected repeatedly and continued in the role for a total of 34 years until stepping down in 2024 ahead of the local elections that June. Granold was also elected to the Mainz-Bingen district council (Kreistag) in 1994 and served in that capacity for many years. These longstanding local mandates underscored her deep roots in grassroots politics within her region.

State parliament service

Ute Granold was a member of the Rhineland-Palatinate Landtag from 1996 to 2002. During this period, she focused particularly on women's policy as the frauenpolitische Sprecherin (spokesperson for women's policy) for the CDU parliamentary group. She later served as Justiziarin (legal advisor) to the CDU parliamentary group. In November 1998, as rapporteur for the Ausschuss für Frauenfragen (Committee for Women's Issues), she presented a report on the under-representation of women in leadership positions across politics, public administration, state-owned companies, crafts, unions, churches, schools, universities, and broadcasting bodies. She emphasized persistent deficits, such as the lack of gender-specific statistics in some areas, and called for greater awareness, structural reforms, flexible working hours, and reliable childcare to advance equality. In a subsequent speech during the same plenary debate, Granold criticized the slow implementation of the Landesgleichstellungsgesetz (state equality law), including delayed ordinances and the absence of equality officers in many municipalities. She addressed the "glass ceiling," traditional role models hindering career and family compatibility, and stagnation in female leadership within state ministries. Granold resigned from the Landtag on 1 November 2002 upon her election to the Bundestag.

Bundestag tenure

Ute Granold served as a member of the German Bundestag from 2002 to 2013 representing the Christian Democratic Union (CDU). She first entered the Bundestag following the 2002 federal election when she was elected via the Rhineland-Palatinate state list of the CDU. She was re-elected in the 2005 federal election, again through the Rhineland-Palatinate state list. In the 2009 federal election, Granold secured a direct mandate by winning the constituency of Mainz (Wahlkreis 206), receiving 36.3 percent of the first votes. ) She did not stand as a candidate in the 2013 federal election, concluding her Bundestag tenure after eleven years of service. During her time in parliament, she served on the Legal Affairs Committee (where she was CDU/CSU spokeswoman on family law issues) and the Committee on Human Rights and Humanitarian Aid (where she most recently chaired the CDU/CSU parliamentary group).

Key political positions

Committee roles and focus areas

Ute Granold was a member of the Legal Affairs Committee during her time in the German Bundestag, drawing on her professional background as a family law attorney to contribute to its work. She was a member of the Committee on Human Rights and Humanitarian Aid, where she served as Obfrau (spokesperson/chairwoman) of the CDU/CSU parliamentary group. In this role, she focused particularly on human rights, including freedom of religion. In April 2010, she founded the Stephanuskreis, a working group within the CDU/CSU parliamentary group dedicated to the protection of religious freedom and persecuted Christians worldwide, and served as its spokesperson. Her committee work emphasized strong advocacy for human rights protections.

Notable legislative activities

Ute Granold represented the CDU/CSU parliamentary group as its speaker in key Bundestag debates on proposed expansions to the Civil Partnership Act (Gesetz über die Eingetragene Lebenspartnerschaft). On 10 February 2006, during the debate on motions from Bündnis 90/Die Grünen and the FDP seeking equalization in tax law, civil service law, and adoption rights for registered same-sex partners, she signaled the Union's willingness to address unjustified disadvantages through adjustments in tax law (including spousal splitting), inheritance tax, and civil service benefits, noting prior Union-led removals of certain inequalities. She drew a firm line against any extension of adoption rights—whether step-child or full adoption—arguing that adoption serves the child's best interest and that children have a right to a father and a mother under constitutional protections for marriage and family (Article 6 of the Basic Law). Granold stressed the lack of reliable empirical studies on the effects of same-sex parenting and insisted that the Union would not cross this boundary. Her value-conservative orientation was reflected in her participation in discussions of the Berliner Kreis, an informal network within the CDU/CSU founded to strengthen the Union's conservative profile, which publicly presented itself in June 2012. In the area of human rights and anti-trafficking efforts, Granold actively participated in legislative debates. During the first reading of the government draft law to combat human trafficking and monitor prostitution establishments on 6 June 2013, she described Germany as a destination and transit country for human trafficking, emphasized that around 80 percent of prostitutes in Germany are foreign nationals, and supported differentiated residence rights for victims from third countries while noting most victims originate from EU states. She welcomed the bill as a first step in the right direction and advocated shifting law enforcement focus toward clients due to challenges in obtaining victim testimony, stating that everything helping trafficked women should not become a matter for political disputes. Her contributions consistently centered on human rights protection and measures against human trafficking during her Bundestag tenure.

Awards and honors

In 2024, Ute Granold received honorary citizenship (Ehrenbürgerin) of Klein-Winternheim, the highest award bestowed by the municipality and the first time it was granted to a woman. The honor recognized her 34 years of service as Ortsbürgermeisterin, during which she shaped the community through dedicated leadership, support for local institutions such as kindergartens and clubs, and humanitarian aid projects. She also received a seal ring bearing the municipal coat of arms.

Personal life

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