Eurogroup Inclusive Format List of Participants

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Eurogroup Inclusive Format List of Participants EUROGROUP IN INCLUSIVE FORMAT Bruxelles, 19 Novembre 2018 PARTICIPANTS President of Eurogroup Mr Mário CENTENO President Belgium: Mr Johan VAN OVERTVELDT Minister for Finance, with responsibility for the Prevention of Tax Evasion Bulgaria: Ms Marinela PETROVA Deputy Minister for Finance Czech Republic: Ms Lenka DUPÁKOVÁ Deputy Minister for Finance Denmark: Mr Rasmus AMMITZBØLD DEGN Deputy Permanent Secretary, Ministry for Finance Germany: Mr Olaf SCHOLZ Federal Minister for Finance Estonia: Mr Toomas TÕNISTE Minister for Finance Ireland: Mr Paschal DONOHOE Minister for Finance and Minister for Public Expenditure and Reform Greece: Mr Efkleidis TSAKALOTOS Minister for Finance Spain: Ms Nadia CALVIÑO SANTAMARÍA Minister for the Economy and Enterprise France: Mr Bruno LE MAIRE Minister for the Economy Croatia: Mr Mato ŠKRABALO Permanent Representative Italy: Mr Giovanni TRIA Minister of Economy and Finances Cyprus: Mr Georges PANTELI Director for Finance Latvia: Ms Līga KĻAVIŅA Deputy State Secretary, Ministry of Finance Lithuania: Mr Vilius ŠAPOKA Minister for Finance Luxembourg: Mr Pierre GRAMEGNA Minister for Finance Hungary: Mr Gábor GION State Secretary of the Ministry of Finance Malta: Mr Edward SCICLUNA Minister for Finance Netherlands: Mr Wopke HOEKSTRA Minister for Finance Austria: Mr Harald WAIGLEIN Director General for Finance Poland: Ms Leszek SKIBA Deputy State Secretary, Ministry of Finance, chief spokesman for public finance discipline Portugal: Mr Ricardo MOURINHO FÉLIX Deputy Minister for Finance Romania: Mr Eleodor MANDREȘ State Secretary, Ministry of Public Finance Slovenia: Mr Andrej BERTONCELJ Vice Prime Minister and Minister for Finance Slovakia: Mr Peter KAŽIMÍR Deputy Prime Minister and Minister for Finance Finland: Mr Petteri ORPO Minister for Finance Sweden: Ms Magdalena ANDERSSON Minister for Finance Commission: Mr Valdis DOMBROVSKIS Vice President Mr Pierre MOSCOVICI Member Other participants: Mr Mario DRAGHI President of the European Central Bank .
Recommended publications
  • EU-Parlament: Ausschussvorsitzende Und Deren Stellvertreter*Innen Auf Den Konstituierenden Sitzungen Am Mittwoch, 10
    EU-Parlament: Ausschussvorsitzende und deren Stellvertreter*innen Auf den konstituierenden Sitzungen am Mittwoch, 10. Juli 2019, haben die siebenundzwanzig permanenten Ausschüsse des EU-Parlaments ihre Vorsitzenden und Stellvertreter*innen gewählt. Nachfolgend die Ergebnisse (Reihenfolge analog zur Auflistung auf den Seiten des Europäischen Parlaments): Ausschuss Vorsitzender Stellvertreter Witold Jan WASZCZYKOEDKI (ECR, PL) AFET Urmas PAET (Renew, EE) David McALLISTER (EPP, DE) Auswärtige Angelegenheiten Sergei STANISHEV (S&D, BG) Željana ZOVKO (EPP, HR) Bernard GUETTA (Renew, FR) DROI Hannah NEUMANN (Greens/EFA, DE) Marie ARENA (S&D, BE) Menschenrechte Christian SAGARTZ (EPP, AT) Raphael GLUCKSMANN (S&D, FR) Nikos ANDROULAKIS (S&D, EL) SEDE Kinga GÁL (EPP, HU) Nathalie LOISEAU (RE, FR) Sicherheit und Verteidigung Özlem DEMIREL (GUE/NGL, DE) Lukas MANDL (EPP, AT) Pierrette HERZBERGER-FOFANA (Greens/EFA, DE) DEVE Norbert NEUSER (S&D, DE) Tomas TOBÉ (EPP, SE) Entwicklung Chrysoula ZACHAROPOULOU (RE, FR) Erik MARQUARDT (Greens/EFA, DE) Seite 1 14.01.2021 Jan ZAHRADIL (ECR, CZ) INTA Iuliu WINKLER (EPP, RO) Bernd LANGE (S&D, DE) Internationaler Handel Anna-Michelle ASIMAKOPOULOU (EPP, EL) Marie-Pierre VEDRENNE (RE, FR) Janusz LEWANDOWSKI (EPP, PL) BUDG Oliver CHASTEL (RE, BE) Johan VAN OVERTVELDT (ECR, BE) Haushalt Margarida MARQUES (S&D, PT) Niclas HERBST (EPP, DE) Isabel GARCÍA MUÑOZ (S&D, ES) CONT Caterina CHINNICI (S&D, IT) Monika HOHLMEIER (EPP, DE) Haushaltskontrolle Martina DLABAJOVÁ (RE, CZ) Tamás DEUTSCH (EPP, HU) Luděk NIEDERMAYER
    [Show full text]
  • Eurogroup Inclusive Format List of Participants
    EUROGROUP IN INCLUSIVE FORMAT Bruxelles, 5 Novembre 2018 PARTICIPANTS President of Eurogroup Mr Mário CENTENO President Belgium: Mr Johan VAN OVERTVELDT Minister for Finance, with responsibility for the Prevention of Tax Evasion Bulgaria: Ms Marinela PETROVA Deputy Minister for Finance Czech Republic: Ms Alena SCHILLEROVÁ Minister for Finance Denmark: Mr Kristian JENSEN Minister for Finance Germany: Mr Olaf SCHOLZ Federal Minister for Finance Estonia: Mr Toomas TÕNISTE Minister for Finance Ireland: Mr Paschal DONOHOE Minister for Finance and Minister for Public Expenditure and Reform Greece: Mr Efkleidis TSAKALOTOS Minister for Finance Spain: Ms Nadia CALVIÑO SANTAMARÍA Minister for the Economy and Enterprise France: Mr Bruno LE MAIRE Minister for the Economy Croatia: Mr Zdravko MARIĆ Minister for Finance Italy: Mr Giovanni TRIA Minister of Economy and Finances Cyprus: Mr Harris GEORGIADES Minister for Finance Latvia: Ms Baiba BĀNE State Secretary, Ministry of Finance Lithuania: Mr Vilius ŠAPOKA Minister for Finance Luxembourg: Mr Pierre GRAMEGNA Minister for Finance Hungary: Mr Mihály VARGA Deputy Prime Minister and Minister for Finance Malta: Mr Edward SCICLUNA Minister for Finance Netherlands: Mr Wopke HOEKSTRA Minister for Finance Austria: Mr Hartwig LÖGER Federal Minister for Finance Poland: Ms Teresa CZERWIŃSKA Minister for Finance Portugal: Mr Ricardo MOURINHO FÉLIX Deputy Minister for Finance Romania: Mr Eugen Orlando TEODOROVICI Minister for Public Finance Slovenia: Mr Andrej BERTONCELJ Vice Prime Minister and Minister for Finance Slovakia: Mr Peter KAŽIMÍR Minister for Finance Finland: Mr Petteri ORPO Minister for Finance Sweden: Ms Magdalena ANDERSSON Minister for Finance Commission: Mr Valdis DOMBROVSKIS Vice President Mr Pierre MOSCOVICI Member Other participants: Mr Mario DRAGHI President of the European Central Bank .
    [Show full text]
  • European Parliament Elections 2019 - Forecast
    Briefing May 2019 European Parliament Elections 2019 - Forecast Austria – 18 MEPs Staff lead: Nick Dornheim PARTIES (EP group) Freedom Party of Austria The Greens – The Green Austrian People’s Party (ÖVP) (EPP) Social Democratic Party of Austria NEOS – The New (FPÖ) (Salvini’s Alliance) – Alternative (Greens/EFA) – 6 seats (SPÖ) (S&D) - 5 seats Austria (ALDE) 1 seat 5 seats 1 seat 1. Othmar Karas* Andreas Schieder Harald Vilimsky* Werner Kogler Claudia Gamon 2. Karoline Edtstadler Evelyn Regner* Georg Mayer* Sarah Wiener Karin Feldinger 3. Angelika Winzig Günther Sidl Petra Steger Monika Vana* Stefan Windberger 4. Simone Schmiedtbauer Bettina Vollath Roman Haider Thomas Waitz* Stefan Zotti 5. Lukas Mandl* Hannes Heide Vesna Schuster Olga Voglauer Nini Tsiklauri 6. Wolfram Pirchner Julia Elisabeth Herr Elisabeth Dieringer-Granza Thomas Schobesberger Johannes Margreiter 7. Christian Sagartz Christian Alexander Dax Josef Graf Teresa Reiter 8. Barbara Thaler Stefanie Mösl Maximilian Kurz Isak Schneider 9. Christian Zoll Luca Peter Marco Kaiser Andrea Kerbleder Peter Berry 10. Claudia Wolf-Schöffmann Theresa Muigg Karin Berger Julia Reichenhauser NB 1: Only the parties reaching the 4% electoral threshold are mentioned in the table. Likely to be elected Unlikely to be elected or *: Incumbent Member of the NB 2: 18 seats are allocated to Austria, same as in the previous election. and/or take seat to take seat, if elected European Parliament ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• www.eurocommerce.eu Belgium – 21 MEPs Staff lead: Stefania Moise PARTIES (EP group) DUTCH SPEAKING CONSITUENCY FRENCH SPEAKING CONSITUENCY GERMAN SPEAKING CONSTITUENCY 1. Geert Bourgeois 1. Paul Magnette 1. Pascal Arimont* 2. Assita Kanko 2. Maria Arena* 2.
    [Show full text]
  • Dear President of the European Parliament, Dear President of The
    Dear President of the European Parliament, Dear President of the European Council, Dear President of the European Commission and Dear President of the French Republic, We all have a responsibility for the shared future of Europe. In this time of crisis, it is high time to re-evaluate some of the rules we have upheld till now and focus on the most important aspects of the European project, which will help us move forward. An unprecedented health crisis is currently affecting millions of people in Europe and tragically taking thousands of lives. However, this is not the end. The economic crisis will crush the hopes and dreams of generations of Europeans. We sincerely hope that we will all do whatever is in our power not to leave anyone behind. We firmly believe that the European Parliament needs to take on its responsibility and share the burden since it is the highest European directly elected body. We need to be part of the solution, not part of the problem. If we want the people to have confidence and trust in the European project, we need to show them that we are also ready to make concessions. Therefore, we would like to ask you to do everything in your power to change the treaties in order to have just a single seat of the Parliament in Brussels. This call has again gained a large majority of support in the 2018 Parliament discharge resolution adopted on 13 May 2020 and shall now be taken into account and acted upon. The financial and environmental costs of moving the Parliament are, especially in these times of digitally connected Europe, extremely high and hard to justify.
    [Show full text]
  • A Look at the New European Parliament Page 1 INTERNATIONAL TRADE COMMITTEE (INTA)
    THE NEW EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT KEY COMMITTEE COMPOSITION 31 JULY 2019 INTRODUCTION After several marathon sessions, the European Council agreed on the line-up for the EU “top jobs” on 2 July 2019. The deal, which notably saw German Defence Minister Ursula von der Leyen (CDU, EPP) surprisingly designated as the next European Commission (EC) President, meant that the European Parliament (EP) could proceed with the election of its own leadership on 3 July. The EPP and Renew Europe (formerly ALDE) groups, in line with the agreement, did not present candidates for the EP President. As such, the vote pitted the S&D’s David-Maria Sassoli (IT) against two former Spitzenkandidaten – Ska Keller (DE) of the Greens and Jan Zahradil (CZ) of the ACRE/ECR, alongside placeholder candidate Sira Rego (ES) of GUE. Sassoli was elected President for the first half of the 2019 – 2024 mandate, while the EPP (presumably EPP Spitzenkandidat Manfred Weber) would take the reins from January 2022. The vote was largely seen as a formality and a demonstration of the three largest Groups’ capacity to govern. However, Zahradil received almost 100 votes (more than the total votes of the ECR group), and Keller received almost twice as many votes as there are Greens/EFA MEPs. This forced a second round in which Sassoli was narrowly elected with just 11 more than the necessary simple majority. Close to 12% of MEPs did not cast a ballot. MEPs also elected 14 Vice-Presidents (VPs): Mairead McGuinness (EPP, IE), Pedro Silva Pereira (S&D, PT), Rainer Wieland (EPP, DE), Katarina Barley (S&D, DE), Othmar Karas (EPP, AT), Ewa Kopacz (EPP, PL), Klara Dobrev (S&D, HU), Dita Charanzová (RE, CZ), Nicola Beer (RE, DE), Lívia Járóka (EPP, HU) and Heidi Hautala (Greens/EFA, FI) were elected in the first ballot, while Marcel Kolaja (Greens/EFA, CZ), Dimitrios Papadimoulis (GUE/NGL, EL) and Fabio Massimo Castaldo (NI, IT) needed the second round.
    [Show full text]
  • European Parliament Made Simple
    THE EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT MADE SIMPLE 2014-2019 The European Parliament Made Simple is produced by the American Chamber of Commerce to the European Union (AmCham EU) as a introduction to the workings of the European Parliament for amateurs and experts alike. Production Team Editor and project manager Giovanni Mastrobuono Senior Communications Officer Editorial assistance Alexandrine Gauvin Communications Officer Eli Corso-Phinney Communications Intern The information contained in this publication has been compiled in good faith and is accurate according to the most recent sources available at the time of going to press. Photographs used with the kind permission of the Audiovisual Libraries of the European Commission, Council of the European Union and the European Parliament. First edition, 2014 ISBN: 978-2-9146856-7-2 Printed in Belgium American Chamber of Commerce to the European Union (AmCham EU) Avenue des Arts 53, B-1000 Brussels Telephone: +32 (0)2 513 68 92 Fax: +32 (0)2 513 79 28 [email protected] www.amchameu.eu Foreword Susan Danger Managing Director American Chamber of Commerce to the European Union t is with great pleasure that I present AmCham EU’s newest guide, The European Parliament Made Simple. The Lisbon Treaty, signed in 2009, gave the European Parliament greater power in EU Idecision-making and an increased role in selecting and approving the European Commission. As a result, this year’s European election has a greater democratic influence than ever before. With this in mind, AmCham EU has published The European Parliament Made Simple to explain the Parliament’s expanded powers and roles, for both the Brussels policy community and public affairs professionals in the EU and US.
    [Show full text]
  • Letter from the ECB President to Mr Johan Van Overtveldt, MEP, on Monetary Policy
    Christine LAGARDE President Mr Johan Van Overtveldt Member of the European Parliament European Parliament 60, rue Wiertz B-1047 Brussels Frankfurt am Main, 21 June 2021 L/CL/21/140 Re: Your letter (QZ-032) Honourable Member of the European Parliament, dear Mr Van Overtveldt, Thank you for your letter, which was passed on to me by Ms Irene Tinagli, Chair of the Committee on Economic and Monetary Affairs, accompanied by a cover letter dated 11 May 2021. While responsibility for competition policy lies with the relevant Union and national authorities, the ECB monitors and analyses market structures, including the degree of market concentration, in order to understand macroeconomic outcomes and their potential implications for the conduct of monetary policy. In this context, we also look at market concentration and its effects on overall price developments.1 Furthermore, as part of our ongoing strategy review, we are analysing various relevant macroeconomic trends, including market concentration, and their impact on monetary policy. The eligibility of all corporate bonds that can be purchased under the corporate sector purchase programme (CSPP) and the pandemic emergency purchase programme (PEPP) is guided by our monetary policy objective and the obligations of the Eurosystem under the Treaties, taking into account appropriate financial risk management considerations. To ensure the effectiveness of monetary policy while keeping a level playing field for all market participants and avoiding undue market distortions, the range of corporate debt instruments 1 See Valletti, T., “Concentration in markets: trends and implications for price-setting”, Price and wage-setting in advanced economies – 2018 ECB Forum on Central Banking, ECB, Frankfurt am Main, 2018, pp.
    [Show full text]
  • Survival of the Richest. Europe's Role in Supporting an Unjust Global Tax
    Survival of the Richest Europe’s role in supporting an unjust global tax system 2016 Acknowledgements This report was produced by civil society organisations in countries across Europe, including: Attac Austria (Austria); Vienna Institute for International Dialogue and Cooperation (VIDC) (Austria); 11.11.11 (Belgium); Centre national de coopération au développement (CNCD-11.11.11) (Belgium); Glopolis (Czech Republic); Oxfam IBIS (Denmark); Kehitysyhteistyön palvelukeskus (KEPA) (Finland); CCFD-Terre Solidaire (France); Oxfam France (France); Netzwerk Steuergerechtigkeit (Germany); Debt and Development Coalition Ireland (DDCI) (Ireland); Oxfam Italy (Italy); Re:Common (Italy); Latvijas platforma attīstības sadarbībai (Lapas) (Latvia); Collectif Tax Justice Lëtzebuerg (Luxembourg); the Centre for Research on Multinational Corporations (SOMO) (Netherlands); Tax Justice Netherlands (Netherlands); Tax Justice Network Norway (Norway); Instytut Globalnej Odpowiedzialnosci (IGO) (Poland); Ekvilib Institute (Slovenia); Focus Association for Sustainable Development (Slovenia); Inspiraction (Spain); Forum Syd (Sweden); Christian Aid (UK). The overall report was coordinated by Eurodad. Each national chapter was written by – and is the responsibility of – the nationally-based partners in the project. The views in each chapter do not reflect the views of the rest of the project partners. The chapters on Luxembourg and Spain were written by – and are the responsibility of – Eurodad. Design and artwork: James Adams. Copy editing: Vicky Anning, Jill McArdle and Julia Ravenscroft. The authors believe that all of the details of this report are factually accurate as of 15 November 2016. This report has been produced with the financial assistance of the European Union, the Norwegian Agency for Development Cooperation (Norad) and Open Society Foundations. The contents of this publication are the sole responsibility of Eurodad and the authors of the report, and can in no way be taken to reflect the views of the funders.
    [Show full text]
  • Master S Thesis
    The socio-economic climate crisis A discourse analysis of Eurosceptic right-wing MEPs in Green Deal plenary debates ©Mathieu Cugnot / The European Parliament Solvej Dam Karlslund Simon Holst Jensen Development and International Relations European Studies 20180626 20180701 Department of Politics and Society Supervisor: Laura Landorff Key strokes: 189.813 January 2021 Table of contents Abstract 5 List of abbreviations 6 1. Introduction 7 1.1 Climate change policies in the context of the European Parliament 8 1.2 Literature review 9 1.3 Puzzle and research question 14 2. Theory 15 2.1 Theoretical approaches to populism 15 2.2 Crisis in populism 17 2.3 Moffitt’s theoretical framework 18 2.3.1 Identify failure 19 2.3.2 Elevate to the level of crisis by linking into a wider framework and adding a temporal dimension 19 2.3.3 Frame ‘the people’ vs. those responsible for the crisis 20 2.3.4 Use media to propagate performance 20 2.3.5 Present simple solutions and strong leadership 21 2.3.6 Continue to propagate crisis 21 2.4 Assisting theory: Taggart’s theme of the populist heartland 22 2.5 Clarification and definitions 23 2.6 Delimitations 24 3. Methodology 25 3.1 Theory of science 25 3.2 Empirical data 26 3.2.1 The nine debates 28 3.3 Critical discourse analysis as a method 29 4. Operationalisation 32 4.1 Trustworthiness 35 Page 2 of 79 5. Analysis 35 5.1 Identify failure 36 5.1.1 Limited identification of climate change failure 36 5.1.2 Social failures overshadowing climate failures 38 5.1.3 Trade, competitiveness and financing failures 38 5.1.4
    [Show full text]
  • Following BG Remarks
    FINAL DRAFT of 05/02/2020 European Semester Conference - Inter-parliamentary Conference on Stability, Economic Coordination and Governance in the European Union - Co-organised by European Parliament and Croatian Parliament European Parliament, Brussels, 18 - 19 February 2020 Tuesday, 18 February 2020 11.30 - 14.00 Registration of participants from national Parliaments Registration desk “Event Participants and Guests” (ZWEIG Welcome Point, Esplanade level) 12.00 - 14.30 Political group meetings: 12:00 - 14:00 S&D (SPAAK 01C047) 12:30 - 14:30 Renew (Members' salon) 13:00 - 14:30 EPP (SPINELLI ASP 5H1) 14.45 - 17.00 Plenary: Widening and deepening of EMU Governance: What next? Meeting room: Hemicycle (SPAAK, 3rd floor) Co-chaired by Irene Tinagli, the Chair of the Economic and Monetary Committee of the European Parliament and Grozdana Perić, Chair, Finance and Central Budget Committee of the Croatian Parliament Introductory remarks by: ECOFIN priorities: Zdravko Marić, Chair of ECOFIN and Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Finance of the Republic of Croatia Eurogroup priorities: Mário Centeno, President of the Eurogroup European Commission priorities: Valdis Dombrovskis, Executive Vice- President of the Commission and Paolo Gentiloni, Commissioner for Economy Monetary policy outlook: Fabio Panetta, Member of the Executive Board of the European Central Bank Exchange of views among Members of National Parliaments and Members of the European Parliament in the presence of representatives from the Committee of Regions and the European Economic
    [Show full text]
  • The Impacts of Brexit on the European Financial Services Ecosystem
    THE IMPACTS OF BREXIT ON THE EUROPEAN FINANCIAL SERVICES ECOSYSTEM INSTITUT THE IMPACTS OF BREXIT 1 ON THE EUROPEAN FINANCIAL SERVICES ECOSYSTEM EXECUTIVE SUMMARY / KEY MESSAGES TOPICS KEY MESSAGES ◆ Eurogroup Consulting and Institute Louis Bachelier (ILB) have combined to produce a study that focuses on the impacts of Brexit in relation to the European fi nancial services ecosystem. It involves a particular focus on the UK fi nancial services STUDY ecosystem as well as the EU fi nancial centres that could benefi t from the outcome of Brexit. The study encompasses both OVERVIEW qualitative and quantitative work as well as primary and secondary research ◆ The six fi nancial services ecosystem actors surrounding Brexit (Corporate & Investment Banking (CIB), Retail Banking, Asset & Wealth Management, Insurance / Reinsurance, Stock Exchange including Clearing and Other Financial Ecosystem Services including FinTech) have a UK annual revenue of GBP 197bn and 1.05 million FTEs ◆ The latest Brexit developments will cause seven core issues for the UK: • Negative: Macroeconomic impacts – lower growth for the UK, loss of passporting rights/no equivalence, human resources/immigration – harder to attract top talent, fi nancial ecosystem actors with no contingency plan (not Day 1 post-Brexit ready), loss of Euro Clearing • Positive: Less UK regulations and tax could attract business, London’s history and traditions ◆ A � Hard Brexit will cause the whole UK fi nancial ecosystem to decrease by 15-25%, reducing UK revenue to within the MACRO-ECONOMIC range of GBP 170-150bn and FTEs down to 890-790k, although London will continue to be one of the leading fi nancial centres post-Brexit with the amount of relocation dependent on the severity of Brexit.
    [Show full text]
  • EP Elections 2014
    EP Elections 2014 Biographies of new MEPs Please find the biographies of all the new MEPs elected to the 8th European Parliamentary term. The information has been collated from published sources and, in many cases, subject to translation from the native language. We will be contacting all MEPs to add to their biographical information over the summer, which will all be available on Dods People EU in due course. EU Elections 2014 Source: European Parliament- 1 - EP Overview (13/06/2014) List of countries: Austria Germany Poland Belgium Greece Portugal Bulgaria Hungary Romania Croatia Ireland Slovakia Cyprus Italy Slovenia Czech Latvia Spain Republic Denmark Lithuania Sweden United Estonia Luxembourg Kingdom Finland Malta France Netherlands EU Elections 2014 - 2 - Austria o People's Party (ÖVP) > EPP o Social Democratic Party (SPÖ) > S&D o Freedom Party (FPÖ) > NI o The Greens (GRÜNE) > Greens/EFA o New Austria (NEOS) > ALDE People’s Party (ÖVP) Claudia Schmidt (ÖVP, Austria) 26 April 1963 (FEMALE) Political: Councils/Public Bodies Member, Municipal Council, City of Salzburg 1999-; Chair, Austrian People's Party (ÖVP) Parliamentary Group, Salzburg Municipal Council 2004-09; Member, responsible for construction and urban development, Salzburg city government, 2009- Party posts: ÖVP: Vice-President, Salzburg, Member of the Board, Salzburg, Political Interest: Disability (social affairs) Personal: Non-political Career: Disability support institution (Lebenshilfe) Salzburg: Manager for special needs education 1989-1996, Officer responsible for
    [Show full text]