Ursula von der Leyen, née Ursula Albrecht, (born Oct. 8, 1958, Brussels, Belgium), Belgian-born German politician who served as Germany’s minister of defense (2013–19) and president of the European Commission (2019– ). She was the daughter of German politician Ernst Albrecht, who had served as chief of cabinet at the Commission of the European Economic Community. After studying at the Universities of Göttingen and Münster as well as at the London School of Economics, she went into medicine and graduated (1987) from Hanover (Germany) Medical School. She worked as an assistant physician (1988–92) and in 1991 was awarded a doctorate in medicine. She lived in the U.S. from 1992 to 1996, and, after her return to Germany, she served as a faculty member (1998–2002) at Hanover Medical School’s department of epidemiology, social medicine, and health systems research. She had joined the Christian Democratic Union (CDU) in 1990, and in 1996 she became involved in the politics of Lower Saxony—the federal state her father had governed (1976–90). She held a series of local and state offices, and in 2004 she was elected to the CDU’s leadership committee. After the CDU won the federal elections in 2005, she was appointed minister of family affairs, senior citizens, women, and youth in Chancellor Angela Merkel’s first cabinet. In December 2013 she was named Germany’s minister of defense, becoming the first woman to hold that office. In July 2019 she was selected to succeed Jean-Claude Juncker as president of the European Commission, and she took office in December of that year.
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