Dobrindt joined the
Junge Union (Junior party of the C.S.U.) in 1986 and 4 years later the
Christian Social Union of Bavaria. He has been a member of the German National Parliament (
Bundestag) since the
2002 federal elections when he won the direct mandate in the Parliamentary Constituency of
Weilheim with 59.4 percent of the votes. Since 2009, he serves as the district-chairman of the CSU in Weilheim-Schongau. In parliament, Dobrindt served as a member of the Committee on Economic Affairs and Technology between 2005 and 2009. In the negotiations to form a
coalition government following the
2013 elections, he was part of the 15-member leadership circle chaired by Merkel, Seehofer and
Sigmar Gabriel. In his capacity as minister, Dobrindt introduced a controversial road toll which forces foreign car drivers to pay up to 130 euros a year for using Germany's
Autobahn motorways; the toll was a pet project of his CSU party. He was also in charge of drafting the government's plan to spend almost 270 billion euros (£226.48 billion) to repair and build new roads, railway lines and waterways between 2017 and 2030. From late 2016, Dobrindt was a member of the German government's cabinet committee on
Brexit at which ministers discuss organizational and structural issues related to the
United Kingdom's departure from the
European Union. Following the
2017 elections, Dobrindt succeeded
Gerda Hasselfeldt as head of the Bundestag group of CSU parliamentarians within the joint
CDU/CSU group led by
Friedrich Merz.
Minister for the Interior (2025–present) On May 6, 2025, Dobrindt was sworn in as
Federal Interior Minister alongside the
Merz cabinet. The following day, he ordered the pushback of illegal immigrants at the German border. On May 13, Dobrindt announced a ban on the far-right "Kingdom of Germany" (
German: "Königreich Deutschland e.V.") association, which had been stockpiling weapons and had been acting increasingly hostile towards Germany's democratic system. Three members of the association were arrested, among them was its founder,
Peter Fitzek. On his visit to Israel and the city of
Bat Yam, reviewing the sites where Iranian missiles struck he was quoted saying: "There is no justification for attacks on a civilian population, as occurred here." On 6 June 2025,
Michael O'Flaherty, the
Council of Europe Commissioner for Human Rights, in a letter to Dobrindt, expressed serious concerns regarding the conduct of German authorities in response to Gaza protests. O'Flaherty stated that After three
Somalis had forced their way into Germany from Poland, using a decision of the administrative court Berlin in summer 2025, Dobrindt initially wanted to continue the pushback of illegals nonetheless and go for a clarifying, higher court ruling. Mid September 2025 his office apparently had backed down, accepting the lower courts verdict and allowing the Somalis to stay in Germany for their asylum proceedings. == Foreign and Security Policy ==