Anne-Christine Lang

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Anne-Christine Lang (born August 10, 1961 in Mont-de-Marsan ( Landes )) is a French politician .

When Vall's first cabinet was formed in 2014, she took over the seat of Jean-Marie Le Guen when he was appointed Secretary of State for Relations with Parliament. In June 2017, she was elected to the National Assembly as a candidate for the La République en Marche party in the 10th Paris constituency .

Education and professional career

Her interest in politics arose in the 1970s with the 1974 presidential election and the passing of the Abortion Facilitation Act (Loi Veil) in January 1975.

During her studies at the Sorbonne and in England with the goal of becoming an English teacher, she got involved in groups that advocated women's rights.

Since she was a specialist in questions of public education and the care of young children, she became an employee of the then Minister for Education, Research and Technological Development Claude Allègre (in office from June 4, 1997 to March 27, 2000 in the Jospin cabinet ).

She then worked in the regional council of the Île-de-France region in the department of regional education policy until she was elected to the National Assembly on May 10, 2014.

In Paris City Council

In 1995, Lang was elected to the Conseil d'arrondissement of the 13th arrondissement of Paris, on March 18, 2001, also in the 13th arrondissement, to the Paris City Council , where she was responsible for childcare alongside Serge Blisko, the mayor of the 13th arrondissement, then at the side of Jérôme Coumet. In 2008 she became deputy mayor of the 13th arrondissement. On March 30, 2014, she was re-elected to the Paris City Council. She is the rapporteur for the Information and Evaluation Commission on issues relating to the commitment of the City of Paris to families and young children (up to three years of age).

In September 2011 she created a website called les tribus du 13 , which brings families and schoolchildren in the 13th arrondissement together on the subject of baby-sitting. With this initiative, she drew the conclusions from the results of a survey in the arrondissement.

As a member of the National Assembly

Lang was the successor to the MP Jean-Marie Le Guen for the constituency of Paris IX . When Le Guen was appointed State Secretary in the Valls cabinet, she moved up and became a member of the National Assembly.

On March 8, 2015, she wrote a comment for the news magazine Le Nouvel Observateur , in which she called on women to become more politically active. She was a member of the Pôle des réformateurs (a group in the right wing of the Socialist Party) and supported government policy during François Hollande's five-year presidency .

In spring 2016, she joined the movement (today's party) En marche and supported Emmanuel Macron in the 2017 presidential election . In the time between the two ballots, she resigned from the Socialist Party. La République en Marche nominated her as a candidate in the 10th Paris constituency for the 2017 general election .

In June 2017 she was elected to parliament for La République en Marche in this constituency . She is one of the few former socialist MPs officially nominated as candidates by the LREM.

In Parliament, she was a member of the Committee on Culture and Education as well as the rapporteur for the commission examining the budget for universities under the Budget Act for 2016, and she was also a member of the committee for assessing teacher training. In December 2018, she was appointed co-rapporteur for the École de la confiance ( School of Trust ) proposed by Education Minister Jean-Michel Blanquer (the heavily controversial law is now in force).

In January 2019, she was asked to repay amounts received for expenses incurred in connection with her work as an MP during her previous term through September 2016.

As she is politically close to Cédric Villani , she supports his candidacy in the Paris local elections in 2020, with which she opposed the party leadership.

With her idea of secularism , she is close to Jean-Michel Blanquer.

See also

Web links

Commons : Anne-Christine Lang  - Collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Results des élections municipales et communautaires 2014. Ministère de l'Intérieur, March 30, 2014, accessed on June 11, 2020 (French).
  2. ^ Six suppléants vont entrer à l'Assemblée nationale. In: Le Parisien . (French, leparisien.fr ).
  3. Députée PS de Paris, je soutiens Emmanuel Macron à l'élection présidentielle
  4. ^ Paris: la suppléante de Le Guen à l'Assemblée démissionne du PS. In: Le Parisien. May 3, 2017 (French, leparisien.fr ).
  5. ^ Législatives à Paris: treize candidats de la République En marche! investis. In: Le Parisien. May 15, 2017 (French, leparisien.fr ).
  6. ^ Paris - 10th constituency - the results of the second round of voting (website of the Ministry of the Interior, accessed June 19, 2017).
  7. ^ Marie-Pierre Bourgeois: Ces fonctionnaires territoriaux qui deviennent députés. In: La gazette des communes June 22, 2017 ( lagazettedescommunes.com ) accessed on March 10, 2019.
  8. ^ Marie-Christine Corbier, Ecole: ce que veut changer le projet de loi Blanquer. lesechos.fr of December 5, 2018, accessed on January 22, 2019.
  9. Le Point: Frais de mandat: la députée Anne-Christine Lang sommée de rembourser January 15, 2019 ( lepoint.fr ) accessed on January 23, 2019.
  10. Manuel Jardinaud: A Paris comme ailleurs, LREM se fracture en vue des municipales. September 5, 2019 ( mediapart.fr ) accessed on September 8, 2019.
  11. “Keep on the fire”: les municipales placent LREM face à ses contradictions. In: Huffington Post June 17, 1019 ( huffingtonpost.fr ).