Schober was born in Cologne and grew up in Brühl, where she graduated from the Erzbischöfliches St. Ursula-Gymnasium in 1984. From 1984 to 1990, she studied food and nutrition science at the University of Bonn and graduated as a certified ecotrophologist. She was the first in her family to graduate from university. During her apprenticeship she worked in the food industry, the bakery and butcher trade, in canteen kitchens, in retirement homes and in agriculture. In 1990, she joined the then-family business of her in-laws, Germany's second largest turkey hatchery Ahlhorn, and in 2001 she took over the management together with her husband Garlich Grotelüschen.
Political career
Grotelüschen has been a member of the CDU since 2000 and deputy district chairman of her party in Oldenburg-Land since 2001. Since 2001, she has been a member of the municipal council of Großenkneten and has served as group leader since 2006; she is also a member of the district council of the administrative districtOldenburg since 2006. In the 2009 general election, Grotelüschen won the constituency Delmenhorst - Wesermarsch - Oldenburg-Land in Lower Saxony with 35.3% of the first votes and thus directly entered the Bundestag. She was able to prevail against Holger Ortel, who had won the constituency before, and now entered the Bundestag via the state list. The SPD had previously won the constituency for nearly thirty years. On April 19, 2010, Grotelüschen was appointed State Minister of Agriculture by Lower Saxony Minister-President Christian Wulff and entered office on April 27, 2010 as part of the Cabinet Wulff II. She left the Bundestag, and was replaced by Ewa Klamt. On December 17, 2010, she resigned from her ministerial office. In the general election on 22 September 2013, Grotelüschen reappeared in her former constituency, prevailed narrowly with less than 700 votes ahead and thus entered the 18th German Bundestag, which she has been a member of since its formation in mid-October 2013. In the 18th legislative term from, Grotelüschen chaired the Subcommittee on Regional Economic Policy and ERP Business Plans from 2014 until 2017. In the 2017 elections, Grotelüschen won the constituency for the third time in a row with 34.1% and a lead of 2063 first votes. She has since been serving on the Committee on Economic Affairs and Energy. In April 2020, Grotelüschen announced that she would not stand in the 2021 federal elections but instead resign from active politics by the end of the parliamentary term.
Controversy
In August 2010, Grotelüschen was reported by animal rights organization PETA on suspicion of being involved in animal cruelty in turkey poultry farms of the Mecklenburg-Vorpommern grower community, of which Grotelüschen's husband holds 30%. The public prosecutor of Oldenburg initiated no investigation against the Grotelüschen family after examination in early October 2010, since the "Grotelüschen family... was not responsible for these animal facilities." In December 2010, Grotelüschen came under criticism again when the public prosecutor's office of Oldenburg investigated the slaughterhouse Geestland Putenspezialitäten GmbH und Co. KG in Wildeshausen owned by the PHW Group, in which the turkey hatchery is a limited partner, on suspicion of assistance to illegal employment and illegal temporary employment. An indictment was filed in 2012, but the trial of the allegations before the district court has not yet taken place as of February 2016.
Personal life
Grotelüschen has three children and lives in Ahlhorn, a village in the municipality of Großenkneten south of Oldenburg.