Alois Rainer (politician, 1965)

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Alois Rainer (2017)

Alois Georg Josef Rainer (born January 7, 1965 in Straubing ) is a German politician ( CSU ).

Life and work

Alois Rainer grew up in Haibach in the Bavarian Forest ( Lower Bavaria ) on a farm with a butcher's shop and an inn. His father Alois Rainer (1921-2002) was mayor, later he was also a member of the state parliament and from 1965 to 1983 the German Bundestag. His sister Gerda Hasselfeldt was also a member of the German Bundestag until 2017 . Between 1980 and 1983 Alois Rainer trained as a butcher , after which he did his basic military service . After graduating as a master craftsman in 1986, he took over his parents' butcher's business in 1987. He still runs it today with his son Markus.

Alois Rainer is married and has two children and a granddaughter.

Political career

Alois Rainer joined the CSU in 1989. From 2005 to 2017 he was chairman of the Haibach local association, and since 2005 he has also been the district chairman of the SME Union . From 2009 to 2016 he was district chairman of the Lower Bavarian Association for Local Political Affairs and since 2012 the deputy state chairman of KPV Bayern. Since 2013 he has been chairman of the arch traffic watchdog.

In 1996 he was elected mayor of the Lower Bavarian municipality of Haibach for the first time and held this office for a total of 18 years. In the 2014 municipal elections , he no longer ran for the office of mayor. Since 2002 he has been a district councilor in the Straubing-Bogen district .

MP

Alois Rainer is a directly elected member of the constituency of Straubing (231). In the 2013 federal election , he received 61.2 percent of the first votes.

In the 18th legislative period of the German Bundestag he was a full member of the Budget Committee , Audit Committee and Committee for Food and Agriculture as well as a deputy member of the Committee for Transport and Digital Infrastructure .

In the 19th legislative period, Alois Rainer was first the budgetary spokesman and then took over the chairmanship of the working group for transport and digital infrastructure of the CDU / CSU parliamentary group from November 2019. Thus, he is also part of the parliamentary committee of the CDU / CSU parliamentary group. He ended his membership in the Budget Committee at the same time. He remains a deputy member of the Committee on Food and Agriculture.

As the transport policy spokesman for the CDU / CSU, he is against a general speed limit on German motorways and instead calls for mobile traffic control systems .

Memberships

Alois Rainer is a member of the non-partisan European Union Germany , which advocates a federal Europe and the European unification process.

Political offices

since 1999 member of the district executive committee of the CSU, since 2015 deputy district chairman in Straubing-Bogen

since 2002 district councilor of the Straubing-Bogen district

since 2008 member of the ZTS Animal Body Disposal Association

since 2009 Chairman of the ZTS Audit Committee

since 2005 district chairman of the SME Union

since 2009 district chairman of the Lower Bavaria Association for Local Politics (KPV)

since 2010 member of the regional board of the Association for Local Politics (KPV)

since 2013 chairman of the arch traffic watch

since 2015 chairman of the federal constituency

since 2013 member of the German Bundestag

2018 to October 2019 budget and financial policy spokesman for the CSU in the German Bundestag

Since 2019 transport policy spokesman in the CDU / CSU parliamentary group

Board membership

2020 to 2023 Advisory Board of the German Air Traffic Control (DFS)

Member of the Supervisory Board of Toll Collect GmbH since 2020

Member of the Board of Trustees of the Deutsches Museum Munich since 2020

Web links

Commons : Alois Rainer  - Collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. The resistance is crumbling: ADAC rekindles the debate about the speed limit. In: Augsburger Allgemeine. January 24, 2020, accessed March 1, 2020 .
  2. ^ Alois Rainer website of the Europa-Union Deutschland. Retrieved January 11, 2018