Thanks, I guess, considering this was a one-post, one-response timeline. In any case, I'll write up a brief history of the Nazi German regime sometime later on, but till then, here's a basic list of German leaders from 1933 to 2000;
Fuhrers
1. Adolf Hitler (1889 - 1948) - January 30, 1933 - February 24, 1948 - NSDAP ✝¹
Chancellors
1. Joseph Goebbels (1897 - 1948) - February 25, 1948 - September 14, 1948 - NSDAP Ƿ²
2. Albert Speer (1905 - 1972) - September 14, 1948 - October 15, 1949 - NSDAP
Presidents
1. Martin Bormann (1900 - 1982) - February 25, 1948 - February 27, 1949 - NSDAP Ƿ²
2. Albert Speer (1905 - 1972) - February 27, 1949 - October 15, 1949- NSDAP
Fuhrers
2. Albert Speer (1905 - 1972) - October 15, 1949 - September 26, 1972 - NSDAP ✝³
3. Harald Leonhardt (1910 – 1979) – September 26, 1972 – October 26, 1979 – NSDAP ✝⁴
4. Walther Koch (1913 – 1985) – October 26, 1979 – February 21, 1985 – NSDAP ✝⁵
5. Achim Kreibel (1943 – 1992) – February 21, 1985 – May 8, 1988 – NSDAP Ƿ⁶
6. Karl-Adolf Fisch (b. 1941) – May 8, 1988 – May 9, 1989 – NSDAP Ƿ⁷
Social Council Chairmen
1. Gerhard Schilling (1933 - 1989) - May 1, 1989 - May 5, 1989 - Military Ƿ⁸
2. Wilhelm Shulz (1936 - 1989) - May 1, 1989 - May 5, 1989 - Military Ƿ⁸
Fuhrers
5. Achim Kreibel (1943 - 1992) - May 9, 1989 - November 1, 1990 - Independent DAP
Presidents
1. Achim Kreibel (1943 - 1992) - November 1, 1990 - May 26, 1992 - Independent DAP
2. Martin Heisig (b. 1942) - May 26, 1992 - Present - VRP
✝1 - Died in Office (Disputed Causes; Drug Overdose/Heart Attack)
Ƿ2 - After Hitler's death, power was divided between a restored chancellery (held by Joseph Goebbels) and presidency (held by Martin Bormann). Political intrigue within the Nazi Party (spearheaded by Bormann) resulted in the widely despised Goebbels being replaced by the Reich Minister for Labour Albert Speer. Shortly thereafter, opposition to Bormann from within the Wehrmacht and SS resulted in the ascension of Speer to the presidency; the 1949 Nuremberg Rally and the subsequent passage of the Reich Organic Law resulted in the official formation of the office of Fuhrer.
✝3 - After serving for almost 33 years (the longest service for a German Fuhrer), Albert Speer died of a stroke; the Reich's second totalitarian leader having overseen a long period of general stability, economic growth (with the exception of the early-1950s), and limited international conflict (again, with the exception of Switzerland in 1950, and the Soviet Union in 1959).
✝4 - Known for his brash personality, punctuated by his domineering appearance (he stood at 6'4"), Fuhrer Harald Leonhardt led an unhealthy lifestyle which was encapsulated in his weight (122 kg) and his tobacco intake (up to 5 packs of cigarettes a day; a fact covered-up by German censors). His impulsive foreign policy brought Germany into a costly intervention in Iran which continued to rage after his death.
✝5 - Unknown to Walther Koch until the months leading up to his death, the 4th Fuhrer of the Third Reich developed an inoperable brain tumour midway through his short service as German dictator. As a consequence, Koch necessitated as a measure declaring that his successor would be his reformist Deputy and apprentice, Achim Kreibel; the future Fuhrer beating out several more moderate candidates for the German succession.
Ƿ6 - Kreibel was (illegally) deposed by his ministry in May 1988 after the Fuhrer proclaimed the so-called 'Eastern Emancipation'.
Ƿ7 - Fuhrer Karl-Adolf Fisch was held under virtual house arrest during the May Putsch of 1989 when anti-reform and pro-NSDAP military officers who opposed the 'Spring Laws' (the proposal to 'open' the Nazi Party to more democratic participation) surrounded the Reichstag whilst it was in session. Fisch was later deposed by his ministry and the German legislature in favour of returning Achim Kreibel to the office of Fuhrer.
Ƿ8 - Generals Gerhard Schilling and Wilhelm Shulz served as provisional joint-chairmen of a military junta (the Council for the Restoration of German Society, or 'Social Council'); with Shulz committing suicide and Schilling being imprisoned (later executed) following the failure of the attempted putsch.
No problem.
As I said in my response post on Page 2, I really don't like using OTL individuals thirty-or-so-years post-POD; as you could probably tell then, Daniel Bremer isn't an alternate version of Paul Bremer, though he was an interesting (and perhaps tragic) public servant/POTUS in his own right.