Helmuth Renzler

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Helmuth Renzler (born March 21, 1953 in Bolzano ) is a South Tyrolean politician.

biography

Helmuth Renzler, who comes from Bolzano, graduated from the commercial college in 1973 . He then studied economics and law for a few semesters at the University of Innsbruck . In addition, he taught technical subjects at various middle and high schools in South Tyrol until 1979 . Since January 1982 he has been a member of staff at the Istituto Nazionale della Previdenza Sociale (NISF / INPS) in Bolzano, where he was promoted to director of the internal agency in November 2010. In addition, since 1994 he has also been working as a freelance journalist in the field of pension and social legislation for various regional and national newspapers and is the author of several specialist books and brochures in the field of social legislation and labor law. In addition, he acts as regional chairman of the trade union public service / state-semi-state in the Autonomous South Tyrolean Trade Union Federation (ASGB).

His political career began in 1989 as a member and chairman of the Community Social Committee (GSA) -Bozen, where he was chairman until 2004. He is a member of the District Social Committee (BSA) Bolzano City and Country, where he was also chairman between 1991 and 2004. From 1991 to 2004 he was a member and until 1995 deputy chairman of the State Social Committee (LSA). He has also been a member of the South Tyrolean People's Party (SVP) since 1991 , where he was a member of the Bozen City and Country District Management until 2004 and since April 2010, since 1998 as a member of the SVP local committee Bozen / Haslach, and also since April 2010 as a member of the SVP -Party committee is active. In the 2013 state elections , he was able to move into the South Tyrolean state parliament with 8,933 preferential votes and thus also the regional council of Trentino-South Tyrol . In the 2018 state elections , he was able to win another mandate with 8,513 preferential votes.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. An overview of the 35 new members of the state parliament. Südtirol Online (stol.it), October 28, 2013, archived from the original on October 31, 2013 ; Retrieved November 23, 2013 .
  2. ↑ Preferred votes for South Tyrol as a whole. State elections 2018 (Wahlen.provinz.bz.it), archived from the original on November 5, 2018 ; accessed on November 1, 2018 .