Starting in 1963, Junker served as East Germany's Construction Minister for over two decades, overseeing the country's housing programme and the construction of the Palace of the Republic but also the deterioration of the historic inner cities in the 1970s and 1980s. He was a full member of the Central Committee of the SED. He was forced out of office during the Peaceful Revolution and committed suicide in April 1990 after being indicted on abuse of office charges.
In 1949, he joined the ruling Socialist Unity Party (SED) and studied at the Engineering School for Construction in Osterwieck until 1952. From 1952 to 1953, he thereafter was a construction manager during the construction of Stalinallee in Berlin,[1][2][3]:86 and until 1954, at the Bau-Union Nord in Glowe.[1][3]:86 He then served as the director of several state-owned enterprises: from 1955 to 1957 of the VEB Excavation and Conveying Works Berlin and from 1958 to 1961 of the VEB Industrial Construction Brandenburg.[1][2][3]:86
Construction Minister
In January 1961,[4] Junker joined the Ministry for Construction as state secretary and first deputy minister.[1][5][6] On 7 February 1963, Junker succeeded Ernst Scholz, who had been ill for quite some time,[6] as Minister for Construction.[1][2][3]:86[5][6] Scholz was appointed as ambassador to the United Arab Republic later that year. From 1972 to 1989, he was chairman of the East German delegation to and from 1973 also chairman of the Comecon commission for cooperation in construction.[1][3]:87
Junker (center) alongside Erich Honecker (left of center) at the opening of the Palace of the Republic in April 1976
When Junker came to power, East Germany still suffered from a post-war housing shortage.[3]:86 In 1971, new SED leader Erich Honecker proposed a massive housing programme, aiming to eliminate East Germany housing shortage by 1990. While the official statistics for many housing units built were greatly inflated, the programme was still considered a success and became the signature policy of Honecker, with 1.9 million housing units being built by 1988. At the same time, Junker's Ministry struggled to maintain the rate of construction in particular during the 1980s due to severe shortages of labor, machines and construction materials.[3]:87[10] Furthermore, the historic inner cities of East Germany were neglected in favor of Plattenbauten in new planned cities such as Berlin-Marzahn and thus greatly deteriorated.[3]:87 Another signature project of Junker's tenure was the Palace of the Republic, constructed from 1973 to 1976.
Afterward, fearing prosecution, Junker initially planned to flee to the Soviet Union with Schalck-Golodkowski, but this was foiled when Schalck-Golodkowski instead defected to West Germany and became an BND informant.[3]:84–85 The Volkskammer revoked his parliamentary immunity in January 1990, after which he was arrested and put in pre-trial detention in Berlin-Hohenschönhausen on suspicion of embezzlement of state funds and breach of the constitution.[1][3]:88[13][14]
He was accused of illicitly collecting 20,000 East German marks annually as an honorary member of the East German Construction Academy.[13] He had also appointed SED leader Erich Honecker and his economics czar Günter Mittag as honorary members. The change of statutes allowing this was deemed unconstitutional, as only the East German finance minister could have legally made the appointments.[15] Additionally, it was alleged that he used funds from a reserve fund of his ministry to build private houses for SED officials.[13]
On 28 February, Junker was released due to his poor health condition,[13][3]:88–89 his health having deteriorated significantly in prison.[3]:88 On 9 April 1990, he committed suicide by hanging in his Berlin apartment.[1][3]:88–89[13][14]
123456789101112131415Behling, Klaus (2016). "Plötzlich und unerwartet ...": Selbstmorde nach Wende und Einheit (in German) (3rded.). Berlin: edition berolina. ISBN978-3-95841-004-6.
12"Krenz wollte Schalck und nicht Modrow". n-tv.de (in German). n-tv. 2019-06-22. Retrieved 2025-07-05. Der frühere DDR-Ministerpräsident Hans Modrow ist erst zu seinem Regierungsposten gekommen, nachdem drei Kandidaten des damaligen SED- und Staatsratschefs Egon Krenz abgelehnt hatten. "Vorher hatte er mit dem Karl-Marx-Städter SED-Bezirkssekretär Siegfried Lorenz, dem Bauminister Wolfgang Junker und mit Alexander Schalck-Golodkowski gesprochen - alle drei winkten ab", sagte der Linke-Politiker dem Redaktionsnetzwerk Deutschland (RND).
12Möbis, Harry (1999). Von der Hoffnung gefesselt: zwischen Stoph und Mittag - mit Modrow (in German). Müncheberg/Mark Berlin: Frankfurter Oder-Ed. ISBN978-3-930842-34-6.