Eva John

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Eva John (* 1967 ) is a German politician ( BMS ).

Life

Eva John completed her studies at the technical college with a degree in administrative management (FH) . She was six years in the social welfare office of the district office, five years in the building department and ten years district treasurer in the Starnberg district . In 2007 she joined the CSU and received the most votes on her party's list in the 2008 city council election. At the same time she was defeated in the local elections in March 2014 as a candidate for mayor of the CSU. After lengthy quarrels, she and Josef Pfister resigned from the CSU city council group. In November 2012 she founded her own group, the Bündnis Mitte Starnberg (BMS).

In the 2014 municipal elections, she was elected Mayor of Starnberg - in the runoff election on March 30th . Because she ran against a CSU candidate, she was expelled from the party the following year. Since the city council election on April 19, 2015 (the 2014 election had been declared invalid), the BMS was represented by six councils, of which only three belonged to the parliamentary group. Eva John was the first woman to hold the office of mayor in Starnberg.

In the local elections on March 15, 2020, she lost under 29 percent to Patrick Janik , who achieved an absolute majority in the first ballot.

Controversy

The administration of the mayor is considered controversial. The cooperation with the city ​​council is considered broken and ended before the administrative court in Munich. On August 14, 2018, the Bavarian State Attorney's Office announced that it was filing a disciplinary action against John at the Munich Administrative Court for various violations of the Bavarian municipal code. On July 4, 2019, the Munich Administrative Court sentenced John for violating her official duties, and her salary was reduced by 10 percent for 1 year as a result of the judgment.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Sensation in Starnberg: mayor voted out. Süddeutsche Zeitung , March 15, 2020, accessed on March 15, 2020 .
  2. ^ Peter Haacke: City council against mayor. Administrative court hears two-thirds majority action. In: Starnberg. Süddeutsche Zeitung, July 3, 2018, accessed on August 15, 2018 .
  3. ^ Peter Haacke: Starnberg Mayor John indicted. In: Politics in Bavaria. Süddeutsche Zeitung, August 14, 2018, accessed on August 15, 2018 .
  4. ^ From the court by David Costanzo, Peter Haacke Starnberg: Court cuts Starnberg's mayor's salary by ten percent . In: sueddeutsche.de . July 4, 2019, ISSN  0174-4917 ( sueddeutsche.de [accessed July 4, 2019]).