Jasmine Hutter

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Jasmine Hutter

Jasmin Hutter-Hutter (born June 11, 1978 in Altstätten , legal resident in Diepoldsau and Altstätten) is a former Swiss politician ( SVP ).

Life

Jasmin Hutter was elected to the Cantonal Council of St. Gallen in 2000, of which she remained a member until 2004. In the elections of October 2003 she was elected to the National Council , to which she was a member until the end of 2009.

In addition to her national council mandate, she worked as a sales manager in her father's construction machinery company . Hutter gained controversial popularity when, in the case of the ordinance of the Federal Office for the Environment on the mandatory introduction of soot particle filters for construction machinery , she requested with a motion that these be suspended until the European Union (EU) had the same guidelines. The background to this was that Switzerland was the only country to have such a filter requirement. After this statement, two filter manufacturers filed a lawsuit against them. However, these lawsuits had to be dropped because, as a parliamentarian, she has political immunity from prosecution . The National Council confirmed this on June 15, 2005.

On March 1, 2008, she was elected as the only woman to the five-person Vice Presidium of SVP Switzerland. Due to her first pregnancy, she resigned as National Councilor in December 2009 and as Vice President in spring 2010. In the National Council, Roland Rino Büchel replaced her as SVP Vice President Nadja Pieren .

Jasmin Hutter has been married since 2007 and has two children.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Jasmin Hutter on the website of the Federal Assembly
  2. Jasmin Hutter lives the SVP role model. 20 minutes , accessed September 16, 2009 .
  3. ^ SVP politician Jasmin Hutter has her second child , Aargauer Zeitung, May 12, 2011