Katja Keul


Katja Keul is a German lawyer and politician of Alliance 90/The Greens. She has been a member of the Bundestag, the German parliament, since the 2009 German federal election.

Education and early career

The daughter of a development aid worker, Keul was born in Berlin. She attended schools in Mostaganem, Höxter, Geneva, Jacksonville, Florida, and Nienburg/Weser. From 1989 to 1994 she studied law at the University of Heidelberg and has been working as a lawyer since 1997.

Political career

Keul has been a member of the Green Party since 2006.
Keul has been a member of the German Bundestag since the 2013 elections, representing the Nienburg II – Schaumburg constituencey. In parliament, she has since been serving on the Committee on Legal Affairs and the Committee on Defense. From 2014 until 2017, she was also part of the parliament's Council of Elders, which – among other duties – determines daily legislative agenda items and assigns committee chairpersons based on party representation. Following the 2017 elections, she also joined the Subcommittee on Disarmament, Arms Control and Non-Proliferation. She has been serving as her parliamentary group's spokesperson on legal affairs since 2013.
In addition to her committee assignments, Keul is a member of the German-American Parliamentary Friendship Group. She has been a member of the German delegations to the Parliamentary Assembly of the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe since 2014 and to the Franco-German Parliamentary Assembly since 2019.
On 7 June 2011, Keul was among the guests invited to the state dinner hosted by President Barack Obama in honor of Chancellor Angela Merkel at the White House.
In 2019, Keul co-founded a cross-party support group for the Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons.

Other activities

In 2014, Keul – alongside fellow Green Party parliamentarians Claudia Roth and Hans-Christian Ströbele – lodged a complaint before the Federal Constitutional Court of Germany, arguing that it was unconstitutional for the government to keep the Bundestag in the dark about planned arms deals because it prevented the parliament from fulfilling its role of keeping the government in check. The court ruled that while the government did not have to disclose information about planned defense exports, it did have an obligation to provide the Bundestag with details, on request, once specific arms deals had been approved.
In 2016, Keul and Volker Beck submitted a compensatory draft law to all parliamentary groups in the German Parliament, urging them to remove Paragraph 175 in the penal code, which criminalized homosexual acts.