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Christian Lindner: From German finance minister to used car salesman

Christian Lindner, Germany’s former finance minister, has long been passionate about cars. Now he’s taken on a key management role at a car dealership business.

Lindner, the ex-leader of the car-friendly Free Democratic Party (FDP), a self-avowed car enthusiast known for driving a pricey vintage Porsche, announced he is taking a new position as deputy chairman of the board for Autoland AG, which calls itself Germany’s “largest auto discounter,” selling new and used cars.

“Today, I want to be where the heart of the German economy beats,” Lindner wrote in an online post. “That it happens to be the automotive industry will not surprise anyone who knows my personal passions.”

Autoland confirmed Lindner’s new role on Wednesday, saying he “will be responsible for marketing, sales, and digitalization.”

Lindner served as finance minister in the troubled, three-party coalition government of previous Chancellor Olaf Scholz. Persistent conflicts over spending between Lindner’s fiscally conservative FDP and his left-leaning coalition partners led to the premature collapse of that government in late 2024, prompting an early federal election in February.

During his time in office, Lindner pushed back against the EU’s planned phaseout of the combustion engine and was seen as close to the auto industry. In 2022, he was embroiled in a scandal over a text-message exchange with Porsche CEO Oliver Blume in which Lindner asked for “support with my arguments.

In the federal election earlier this year, Lindner’s FDP failed to reach the 5 percent threshold required for a party to make it into the Bundestag. He then stepped down as leader of the party, marking a stunning downfall for a politician once deemed by his peers to be a wunderkind of European fiscal conservatism.

Under German law, former members of government have to report new private sector jobs for 18 months after leaving office. In cases involving potential conflicts of interest, the current government can disallow former officials from taking a job.

German media poked fun at the former finance minister over his new job.

“Christian Lindner joins the ranks of used car dealers,” ran the headline of a Spiegel article.

LP Staff Writers

Writers at Lord’s Press come from a range of professional backgrounds, including history, diplomacy, heraldry, and public administration. Many publish anonymously or under initials—a practice that reflects the publication’s long-standing emphasis on discretion and editorial objectivity. While they bring expertise in European nobility, protocol, and archival research, their role is not to opine, but to document. Their focus remains on accuracy, historical integrity, and the preservation of events and individuals whose significance might otherwise go unrecorded.

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