Party career In 1988, Nahles joined the SPD at the age of 18. Shortly after, she was the youth representative for the constituency of Mayen-Koblenz. From 1993 to 1995 she was the youth representative for Rhineland-Palatinate. In 1995 she became the national youth representative, following
Thomas Westphal, a post she held until 1999. Since 1997 she has been a member of the SPD executive. In 2000, Nahles was one of the founders of the "
Forum Demokratische Linke 21" (Forum of the Democratic Left 21). As leader of the SPD's left wing and former head of party's youth section, she opposed many of Chancellor
Gerhard Schröder's economic reforms, namely the
Agenda 2010. She and others repeatedly criticized the leadership style of the party's chairman
Franz Müntefering, saying the party was never consulted over Schröder's decision in May 2005 to call early elections or the decision to join a grand coalition under Merkel that would include the major parties. As party leaders sought to reconcile the bickering factions in the post-Schröder era, Nahles gained in leverage. On 31 October 2005, she was voted the SPD's general secretary, defeating
Kajo Wasserhövel, the favoured man from the conservative side of the party. Wasserhövel's defeat prompted
Franz Müntefering to declare that he no longer felt he had the confidence of the party and would step down. As a result, Nahles refused to accept the position of general secretary. Between 2005 and 2009, Nahles served on the Committee on Labour and Social Affairs. From 2008, she was also a member of the SPD parliamentary group's leadership under chairman
Peter Struck. Ahead of the
2009 elections, German foreign minister
Frank-Walter Steinmeier included her in his
shadow cabinet of 10 women and eight men for the Social Democrats' campaign to unseat incumbent
Angela Merkel as chancellor. During the campaign, Nahles served as shadow minister for education and integration policies, being a counterweight to incumbent
Annette Schavan.
General Secretary of the SPD, 2009–2013 Nahles was elected as the SPD's secretary general in November 2009 at the party congress held in
Dresden. She succeeded
Hubertus Heil in the position, and worked together with new-elected party leader
Sigmar Gabriel. Her appointment was widely seen as a signal the SPD would shift to the left. In her capacity as secretary general, Nahles oversaw the SPD's electoral campaign in 2013.
Federal Minister of Labour and Social Affairs, 2013–2017 As Federal Minister of Labour and Social Affairs in Chancellor
Angela Merkel's
third Cabinet, Nahles has overseen the introduction of a national minimum wage for Germany, guaranteeing workers at least 8.50 euros per hour ($11.75). Merkel had campaigned against a statutory minimum wage in 2013, saying it would threaten Germany's competitive edge and that wage-setting belonged in the hands of companies and employees; however, her party gave ground to the Social Democrats, who made the measure a condition for helping her stay in power for a third term. In early 2015, however, Nahles bowed to pressure from Germany's eastern neighbours, particularly
Poland, and suspended controls by state authorities to check whether foreign truck drivers were being paid the minimum wage. After having campaigned on the promise of early retirement for longtime workers during the elections, Nahles also managed the introduction of an early retirement law in 2014. The move, which – at expected total costs of about 160 billion euros between 2015 and 2030 – is likely to be the most expensive single measure of the legislative period, was sharply criticized as Germany grapples with an aging population and a shrinking work force and promotes austerity among its European Union neighbors. In late 2014, Nahles also announced that the combined pension contributions from employers and employees would be cut by a total of 2 billion euros in 2015 due to the high level of reserves. Following annual negotiations between the
Claims Conference and the German government in 2014, Nahles successfully introduced a proposal for extending German pension payments totaling 340 million euros ($461 million) for some 40,000
Holocaust survivors who were used by the
Nazis in ghettos as laborers in exchange for food or meager wages. Most Holocaust survivors suffered serious malnutrition during
World War II and also lost almost all of their relatives, leaving them with many medical problems and little or no family support network to help them cope. Following a succession of strikes that disrupted Germany's air and train travel in 2014, Nahles introduced a bill which amended
labor laws to allow only one trade union to represent employees of one company in negotiating
wage agreements, a move critics say in effect will deprive small unions of their right to strike. In 2015, Nahles commissioned an in-depth study to establish a definition of
work-related stress and calculate its economic cost, leading to speculation that the study could pave the way for an "anti-stress act" as proposed by Germany's
metalworkers' union. In response to rightwing populist assaults on chancellor Angela Merkel's liberal immigration policies, Nahles presented plans in early 2016 to ban EU migrants from most unemployment benefits for five years after their arrival.
Leader of SPD in Bundestag, 2017–2019 After the Social Democrats experienced their worst result in German post-war history in the
2017 elections, their chairman
Martin Schulz nominated Nahles to lead the party's group in the German Parliament. She replaced
Thomas Oppermann and was the first woman to serve in this role. In the negotiations to form a
fourth coalition government under Merkel, Nahles led the working group on social affairs, alongside
Barbara Stamm and
Karl-Josef Laumann. In addition to her role as chairwoman, Nahles also joined the Committee on the Election of Judges (
Wahlausschuss), which is in charge of appointing judges to the
Federal Constitutional Court of Germany.
Leader of the Social Democratic Party, 2018–2019 Nahles was elected as the first ever female leader of the
Social Democratic Party on 22 April 2018 at the party convention in Wiesbaden. She won the election with 414 delegate votes, against her opponent
Simone Lange, who received 172 delegate votes, which worked out as 66% to 27% respectively. She succeeded
Olaf Scholz who was acting leader for two months after the resignation of
Martin Schulz who led the party to their worst election result since 1933. Nahles was the first female leader of the party in its 155-year history. Furthermore, this was the first time ever in German history that the country's two largest parties were led by women, the other being
CDU with its leader
Angela Merkel. Nahles was widely credited with stewarding the party toward another coalition government with Merkel's Christian Democrats. On 2 June 2019, Nahles announced that she would resign as SPD leader in the face of personal unpopularity, a major defeat for the SPD in the
2019 European Parliament election, and a record low result in the Forsa poll of 1 June 2019. She stated she would also resign as leader of the SPD parliamentary group in the Bundestag. ==Life after politics==