He was born in 1926 in Brandenburg an der Havel to a working-class family. After attending elementary school, he completed training as a metal aircraft builder from 1941 to 1944 at a branch of the Arado Flugzeugwerke in Brandenburg/Neuendorf. From 1944, he served voluntarily in the Kriegsmarine. From 1945 to 1949, he was a Soviet prisoner of war, during which time he attended several anti-fascist schools.[1]
After the end of World War II, parts and machines of the Arado factories that were not destroyed by air raids were transported to the Soviet Union as reparations, and the company was liquidated. Therefore, Timm could not return to his profession after his release from captivity in 1949.[1]
In 1960, he became a department head and later, in 1961, Secretary for Agitation and Propaganda of the Bezirk Rostock SED, succeeding Werner Krolikowski, who became Second Secretary.[2] In 1961, he became Bezirk Rostock SED Second Secretary, also responsible for Organization and Cadre Affairs, himself.[1][2]
In 1966, he returned to the Rostock City SED as First Secretary.[1]
He additionally became a member of the FDGB federal executive board the same year and was elected as a full member of the Central Committee of the SED in May 1976 (IX. Party Congress).[1]Later that year, he became member of the Volkskammer,[1] nominally representing a constituency in the western part of his Bezirk.[4] During his parliamentary tenure, he was a member of the Foreign Affairs Committee from 1982.[1]
During the supply crisis and the clearly visible problems in the GDR in the early 1980s, he was quoted by the West German magazine Der Spiegel:[5]
There is no reason to doubt the good and correct policy of the party if we call for the frugal use of everything available to us, even if we have to make certain changes in the assortment, even for everyday goods, and cannot always fulfill every wish at all times in supply matters.
— Ernst Timm, "Immer nur Huhn", DER SPIEGEL (44/1982)
In June 1989, he gained attention when, as a member of the Volkskammer, he confirmed the SED leadership's approval of the Tiananmen Massacre by the Chinese People's Liberation Army on 3 and 4 June 1989, and referred to the protesting students as "anti-constitutional elements."[6][7][8][9]
The members of the Volkskammer state that in the current situation, the political solution of internal problems persistently sought by the party and state leadership of the People's Republic of China has been prevented by the violent, bloody actions of anti-constitutional elements. Consequently, the people's power was forced to restore order and security using armed forces. Unfortunately, there were numerous injuries and deaths.
— Ernst Timm, parliamentary speech in the Volkskammer (8 June 1989)
At one of the many meetings in the autumn of 1989, he was asked what the dictatorship of the proletariat actually was. His answer, that he would have to look it up in Lenin, caused loud laughter and revealed the state of the SED nomenklatura in the autumn of 1989 in the GDR.[9][10]
During the Wende, on 12 November 1989, the Bezirk Rostock SED removed him from the position of First Secretary and installed reformer Ulrich Peck as his successor.[2][11][12] He was removed by his party from the Volkskammer a week later, on 16 November 1989.[1][13][14]
He was subsequently expelled from the FDGB in December 1989 and the SED on 16 January 1990.[1][15]
After being charged with abuse of office and corruption in August 1990, he was sentenced on 16 February 1993, by the Rostock Regional Court to 15 months in prison for breach of trust, as he had taken 80,000 East German marks from a fund for people's representatives for the expansion of his house. The sentence was suspended after taking into account the pre-trial detention.[1][16][17]
^"Chronologie". stasibesetzung.de (in German). Gesellschaft für Zeitgeschichte Erfurt. Retrieved 2024-06-29.
^Zimmermann, Monika, ed. (1994). Was macht eigentlich--? 100 DDR-Prominente heute (in German) (1. Aufl ed.). Berlin: Ch. Links. pp. 271–275ff. ISBN978-3-86153-064-0.
^Marxen, Klaus; Werle, Gerhard, eds. (2000). Strafjustiz und DDR-Unrecht: Dokumentation (in German). Berlin ; New York: De Gruyter. pp. 191–194ff. ISBN978-3-11-016134-2.