Party positions Spahn became a member of the
Junge Union Deutschlands (JU) in 1995, aged 15. He went on to join the CDU in 1997. He was the chair of the Borken district JU from 1999 to 2006. In 2005, he also took up the chair of the Borken district CDU, which numbers 6,500 members. In December 2014 Spahn unexpectedly stood for a place on the CDU's ruling council against health minister
Hermann Gröhe, in a contest widely seen as crystallizing the generational tensions within the party. His election bid was backed by the then 72-year-old finance minister,
Wolfgang Schäuble. Shortly before the vote at the annual CDU party conference, Gröhe withdrew his candidacy and Spahn was elected. He has been mentioned as a possible replacement for Angela Merkel as Chancellor, and stood in the CDU leadership campaign in 2018 after Merkel announced that she would not seek re-election as party leader. However, the 157 votes he secured, despite being more than expected, was insufficient for him to qualify for the second round of voting, which was won by
Annegret Kramp-Karrenbauer. From November 2005, Spahn served as the vice-chair of the CDU/CSU working group on health policy, while at the same time chair of the CDU–CSU parliamentary group in the Committee of Health. He was also a member of the CDU–CSU–SPD coalition working group, which brought about the 2007 health reform. Since 2009, he has been chair of the working group on health and health policy as well as the spokesman of the CDU–CSU parliamentary group on health policy. Spahn was a substitute member of the Budget Committee. He is part of the "Young Group" of the CDU–CSU parliamentary group. Spahn co-founded a cross-party group of young MPs pushing for the integration of intergeneration equity as a national objective into Germany's
Basic Law. Between 2005 and 2013, Spahn served as deputy chair of the German–Dutch Parliamentary Friendship Group. Since 2014, he has been its chair. In negotiations to form a government following the
2013 federal elections, Spahn led the CDU–CSU delegation in the health working group; his co-chair from the SPD was
Karl Lauterbach.
Parliamentary state secretary in the Federal Ministry of Finance, 2015–2018 In 2015, Spahn became
Parliamentary State Secretary in the
Federal Ministry of Finance under minister
Wolfgang Schäuble in the
third cabinet of
Chancellor Angela Merkel. At the ministry, he oversaw the German government's
annual budget. He was in charge of representing Germany in the negotiations on the annual
budget of the European Union.
Federal Minister of Health, 2018–2021 In the
fourth Merkel cabinet, Spahn was appointed
Federal Minister of Health in March 2018, succeeding
Hermann Gröhe. In addition, he chaired the
EPP Health Ministers Meeting, which gathers the center-right EPP ministers ahead of meetings of the
Employment, Social Policy, Health and Consumer Affairs Council (EPSCO). When Germany held the rotating
Presidency of the Council of the European Union in 2020, he chaired the meetings of EPSCO.
Global health In 2019, Spahn visited four countries in sub-Saharan Africa to witness up close the fight against
Ebola. Alongside
Armin Laschet, he was invited by
President Emmanuel Macron of
France to attend the 2020
Bastille Day celebrations in Paris, in a sign of gratitude for their role in helping French citizens during the
COVID-19 pandemic in France. As a representative of the German government, he was later part of the delegation accompanying Macron on his state visit to
South Africa in May 2021.
COVID-19 pandemic On 20 October 2020, Spahn stated on morning TV: ‘At least we know what the main causes of [COVID-19] infection are. Parties, social occasions, at home and in private or at events, when going to clubs.’
Der Spiegel magazine later revealed that, on the very same evening, Spahn met around a dozen CDU party donors for a business dinner at an associate's house. According to the German news channel ntv, each guest was asked to donate €10,000 (£8,600) to take part. Spahn developed symptoms and tested positive the next day, which suggests he was
infectious while attending the party. In March 2021, the "Burda mask deal" caused a major political storm when it was revealed that the
Burda company had delivered half a million medical masks to the Spahn-led
Federal Ministry of Health for $4.50 each, without the Ministry having first put the deal out to
open tender. Burda, of which Spahn's husband,
Daniel Funke, was the former editor-in-chief and lobbyist at the time of the deal, reportedly procured the protective masks for $1.73 each through a
Singapore company. According to
polls, the CDU/CSU coalition's popularity fell from 35 percent to 27 percent following the "Burda mask deal".
Deputy Chair of CDU/CSU Group, 2021–2025 From December 2021, Spahn served as one his parliamentary group's deputy chairs, under the leadership of successive chairs
Ralph Brinkhaus (2021–2022) and
Friedrich Merz (2022–2025). In this capacity, he oversaw the group's legislative activities on economic affairs and climate protection. In the negotiations to form a
coalition government of the CDU and
Green Party under
Minister-President of North Rhine-Westphalia Hendrik Wüst following the
2022 state elections, Spahn led his party's delegation in the working group on economic affairs, energy and climate protection; his co-chair from the Green Party was
Mona Neubaur. ==Political positions==