Eduard Mainoni

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Eduard Mainoni (born February 10, 1958 in Salzburg ) is an Austrian politician ( BZÖ ). He was State Secretary in the Federal Ministry for Transport, Innovation and Technology in the Federal Government Schüssel II .

After completing his law studies in 1985 and completing a legal internship at the Salzburg District and Regional Court, Mainoni was director of the Austrian Security Service from 1986 to 2001 and a member of the management from 2002 to 2004.

Politically, he worked as the chairman of the FPÖ local council club in Salzburg, deputy regional party chairman of the FPÖ Salzburg , member of the Federal Council and from 1999 to 2004 as a member of the National Council .

From June 25, 2004 Mainoni initially worked for the FPÖ, from April 2005 for the BZÖ, founded by Jörg Haider , as State Secretary in the Federal Ministry for Transport, Innovation and Technology.

From April 2005 Mainoni officiated first as spokesman, since March 2006 as elected chairman of the BZÖ regional group Salzburg.

Shortly before the National Council election in 2006 , an interview with Mainoni caused a sensation, in which he admitted, among other things, that the offensive thematization of immigration policy is a “business with fear” and that the forced labor restitution was “bought” for strategic reasons "To have peace from the Jewish organizations".

In the meantime, Mainoni has withdrawn into the private sector (he was the managing director of a local development company) and is currently working on his own project for storage space rental in Salzburg. Mainoni has been running the Habsburger wine bar in Salzburg-Lehen since the beginning of 2011. Mainoni has since resigned from his position as chairman of the BZÖ Salzburg and has resigned from the alliance.

In 2014, Mainoni stood as the top candidate for the Stronach team in the municipal council elections in the city of Salzburg. However, the party only reached 1.6 percent and failed to make it into the local council.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Team Stronach competes in Salzburg under a new name. In: derStandard.at. December 6, 2013, accessed March 25, 2014 .
  2. Election in Salzburg: Damage must go to the runoff. In: Salzburg.com. March 10, 2014, accessed March 25, 2014 .