Word: bavarians
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...Franz Josef Strauss, 51, the powerful Bavarian leader who was forced to resign as Defense Minister in a 1962 scandal after ordering the arrest of several staffers of the newsmagazine Der Spiegel on flimsy charges of treason. Strauss was the key man in selecting Kiesinger as the Christian Democrats' candidate for Chancellor, will make his comeback as Minister of Finance in the new government. The other is Gerhard Schroder, 56, who moved from his post as Foreign Minister under Erhard to take on the controversial and besieged position of Defense Minister. Strauss is a Catholic and a Gaullist who blames...
...negotiating to form a coalition of their own to end the Christian Democrats' 17 years of uninterrupted rule. Desperate for a solution, Erhard's party decided to throw the choice open to a vote by its Bundestag members. On the third ballot, with the decisive backing of Strauss's Bavarian Christian Social Union, the decision went to the man who seemed best fitted to pull the divided party?and the country?together...
...experts could only guess at which parties would ultimately succeed in forming a new government. Some clues could be expected in how well the three parties fared in this week's Bavarian state elections. Whatever the final outcome, it seemed likely that West Germany's next government would rudely revise most of Bonn's most holy foreign policy tenets. For years, Bonn has stood unbendingly for no official contact with East Germany, no diplomatic relations with any country that recognized East Germany, no detente with the Soviet bloc, until after Germany achieved reunification. As a price...
...Even Christian Democrats were gingerly deserting some of the old doctrines. Speaking to a rally of young party members, Kiesinger allowed that "the establishment of good relations with our neighbors to the east is an obvious necessity." And Franz Josef Strauss, the powerful boss of the party's Bavarian branch, publicly backed away from his insistence on West German participation in a NATO nuclear strike force, thus opening the way for a more conciliatory policy toward the East...
...margin: 137 to 81 for Foreign Minister Gerhard Schroder and 26 for C.D.U. Parliamentary Leader Rainer Barzel. One reason was that Kiesinger had been away from the Bundestag for eight years, thus had fewer enemies. He also had a powerful friend: Franz Josef Strauss, the burly boss of the Bavarian branch of the party, which had publicly endorsed Kiesinger the day before. Another was that he fitted the C.D.U.'s concept of a candidate by being not too Gaullist to alienate the party's Atlanticists and not too Catholic to offend the Protestants. But the main factor...