Herbert Ehrenberg  (21 December 1926 – 20 February 2018) was a German politician.[ 1] 
Ehrenberg was born in Kollnischken , East Prussia  (today Kolniszki, Gmina Gołdap , Poland ) and visited school (Staatliche Kantschule) in Goldap  until 1943, when he was conscripted to the Wehrmacht . He joined the Nazi Party  on 20 April 1944. After his release as Prisoner of war  in 1947 he passed his Abitur  and studied national economy in Wilhelmshaven  and at the University of Göttingen , where he took his doctorate in 1958.[ 1] 
Ehrenberg joined the Public Services, Transport and Traffic Union  (ÖTV) in 1949 and the Social Democratic Party of Germany , or SPD, in 1955. In 1964 he became the head of the national economy branch at the chairman of IG Bau-Steine-Erden -Union and in 1968 he started to work at the Federal Ministry of economics . In 1969 he switched to the German Chancellery  and was a Secretary of State at the Federal Ministry of Labour and Social Affairs (Germany)  in 1971–72 and its Minister in 1976–82.
Herbert Ehrenberg (left) and Holger Börner  in 1973 Ehrenberg was the vice-president of the Social Democratic Fraction in the Bundestag  in 1974–1976 and a member of the Federal Executive Board of the SPD in 1975–1984. In 1997–2001 he was the Chairman of the Honorary Executive Board and in 2001–2003 the first President of the Internationaler Bund Freier Träger der Jugend-, Sozial- und Bildungsarbeit , afterwards its Honorary President.[ 1] [ 2] 
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