Altmaier has been a member of the
CDU since 1976.
Member of the Bundestag, 1994–2021 Altmaier has been a member of the
Bundestag since the
1994 national elections. He was elected in the
constituency of
Saarlouis. Between 1994 and 2002, he served on the Committee on Legal Affairs and the Committee on Affairs of the European Union, where he was his parliamentary group's rapporteur on matters related to the
Charter of Fundamental Rights of the European Union. When the Bundestag created a committee to examine whether then-Chancellor
Gerhard Schröder and others in the governing
SPD party inflated economic figures before the
2002 federal elections to hide a growing budget deficit, he was chosen by his parliamentary group to lead the inquiry. From 2006 to 2011 Altmaier was president of
Europa-Union Deutschland, the German section of the
Union of European Federalists. In the 2021 federal elections Altmaier lost his constituency to
Heiko Maas, but still reentered the Bundestag through his party's list. However, on 9 October 2021, Altmaier resigned from the Bundestag together with
Annegret Kramp-Karrenbauer in order to make room for younger people.
Parliamentary State Secretary, 2005–2009 Following the
2005 federal elections, Altmaier became
Parliamentary State Secretary in the
Federal Ministry of the Interior under
Wolfgang Schäuble. In this capacity, he publicly admitted in 2009 that Germany followed a request of the government of Saudi Arabia it to grant influential cleric
Abdullah Ibn Jibreen police protection in a Berlin hospital where he was undergoing heart treatment; the decision garnered sharp criticism from the opposition parties, with the
Green Party questioning why Germany hosted someone who "has called for the killing of Shiites [and] praised
Osama bin Laden." In 2009, Altmaier was mentioned by international media as potential candidate for the office of
European Commissioner.
Chief whip, 2009–2012 Succeeding
Norbert Röttgen as parliamentary secretary (
chief whip) of the
CDU/CSU parliamentary group in the Bundestag following the
2009 elections, Altmaier was in charge of negotiating the passage of
Eurozone crisis legislation through the parliament. He served as the government's chief negotiator with the opposition Social Democrats and Greens, as well as with potential rebels from the government benches. While in office, Altmaier coordinated the government's efforts to exit nuclear power generation by 2022 and rely on more renewable sources such as wind and solar ("
Energiewende"). He also demanded companies to harvest metals including rare earths from recycled electronics as Germany sought to become less dependent on imports from China and other nations. Together with his French counterpart
Delphine Batho, he put in motion the establishment of the French-German Office for Renewable Energies (L'Office Franco-allemand pour les énergies renouvelables) in 2013. In 2012, Altmaier led the German delegation to the
2012 United Nations Climate Change Conference in
Doha. In 2013, Altmaier and Economics Minister
Philipp Rösler reached agreement on far-reaching regulations for the fracking industry.
Federal Minister, 2013–2021 In the negotiations to form a government following the
2013 federal elections, Altmaier led the CDU/CSU delegation in the energy working group; his co-chair from the SPD was
Hannelore Kraft,
Minister-President of
North Rhine-Westphalia. In Angela Merkel's
third Cabinet he serves as the Head of the
Federal Chancellery and a
Federal Minister for Special Affairs. In this capacity, he is also in charge of co-ordinating Germany's intelligence services. In July 2015, Altmaier invited the
United States Ambassador to Germany,
John B. Emerson, to explain documents publicized by
WikiLeaks that showed what appeared to be summaries of recorded conversations involving Chancellor Merkel or senior officials. Shortly after, WikiLeaks released additional documents including Altmaier's telephone number, adding to a growing pile of allegations that United States intelligence agencies
conducted extensive surveillance of the German government. In October 2015, Merkel put Altmaier in charge of coordinating Germany's response to the refugee crisis. From early 2017, he was a member of the German government's cabinet committee on
Brexit at which ministers discussed organizational and structural issues related to the
United Kingdom's departure from the
European Union. Following the
2017 elections, Altmaier became acting and temporary finance minister when
Wolfgang Schäuble left office as Schäuble had agreed to become
President of the Bundestag. In January 2021 it was reported that Altmaier favoured "seizing control", possibly using
Article 122 of the TFEU, "of the (COVID-19 vaccine) production process and ordering companies to manufacture vaccines at multiple sites." ==Political positions==