The name Jakob Maria Mierscheid keeps haunting the Bundestag. He has been said to have sat in parliament for the SPD since 1979, but in reality the deputy is just an artificial figure – and a welcome amusement in the often formal everyday political life.
Norbert Lammert was trying to suppress his grin when he opened the Bundestag session on March 1, 2013. Because the then President of the Bundestag was able to convey very special congratulations on this day: He congratulated the SPD MP Jakob Maria Mierscheid on his 80th birthday. Mierscheid is “a valued and occasionally desperately sought-after colleague” who, however, had to miss the meeting “for compelling reasons”. Some colleagues would even doubt whether it even existed.
Lammert resolutely rejected such speculations that day with a mischievous smile. To the laughter of many members of parliament, because everyone in the Reichstag knew: Jakob Maria Mierscheid does not actually exist. He is the phantom of the German parliament.
Jakob Maria Mierscheid – the MP that nobody has seen yet
Norbert Lammert is not the only one who treats the ominous Social Democrat as a real colleague. Jakob Maria Mierscheid has an entry on the website of the SPD parliamentary group and is presented there with a detailed curriculum vitae: One learns, among other things, that Mierscheid was born in 1933, has four children, was awarded the Silver Badge of Honor of the Morbach Men’s Choir and since 1979 for the Social Democrats sit in the Bundestag. In 2017, the SPD party newspaper “Vorwärts” published an interview with the allegedly press-shy politician, in which he spoke out in favor of Martin Schulz as chancellor. For a long time he even appeared on the website of the German Bundestag.
His greatest achievement is the so-called “Mierscheid law,” which is intended to predict the SPD’s performance in federal elections based on crude steel production in the old federal states: the higher the production, the better the SPD’s result. In fact, in the past it was sometimes possible to make forecasts that at least did not entirely ignore reality. In his work, Mierscheid devotes himself, it is said, in addition to social issues, in particular to the rearing and care of the ringed crested pigeon in Central Europe with great passion.
Mierscheid is also popular with other factions
But how was it possible for a fictitious member of parliament to attain such a role in what is often so formal politics? The trail leads to the year 1979, the year in which Mierscheid allegedly first entered the Bundestag – at that time still in Bonn. Carlo Schmid, longtime member of the SPD and Bundestag Vice President, had died shortly before. Two of his colleagues, the parliamentarians Peter Würtz and Karl Haehser, therefore invented the fictional character Mierscheid. She was to serve as a worthy successor to Schmid, who was known for his sense of humor. At some point, the Mierscheid phenomenon took on a life of its own, and the fictitious politician has long been valued in other parliamentary groups in the House. Over the years, however, Mierscheid has resisted all attempts to poach and collect by other parties.
In the SPD, Mierscheid not only serves as a welcome amusement in everyday politics, the venerable MP is also intended to remind people of the traditional values of the social democrats. “Someone like Mierscheid is needed,” said the late parliamentary group leader Peter Struck. “In everyday politics, we are pragmatically oriented, it’s about solving problems. It’s necessary for someone to question it.” From time to time, Mierscheid is still quoted in speeches in the Bundestag, which always causes great amusement in the plenum. In the old capital of Bonn there were two cafés that bore his name, and in Berlin’s Paul-Löbe-Haus, where MPs have their offices, a bridge was named after him in 2009. And despite his advanced age, Mierscheid keeps up with the times and is also present on the internet – with his own accounts on Twitter and Facebook.
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Source: Stern

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