Patrick Ott

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Patrick Oliver Ott (born February 7, 1967 in Würzburg ) is a German financial advisor and former politician ( CSU , FDP ). From 1990 to 1994 he was a member of the first Saxon state parliament

was from 1990 to 1994 one of only four members of parliament from West Germany in the first Saxon state parliament after the fall of the wall.

biography

education and profession

Ott graduated from high school in Icking in 1986 and completed an apprenticeship as a banker at Bayerische Vereinsbank in 1988 . Then he was managing partner of Tentec GmbH. From 1995 to 1997 he studied political science , law and economic history at the Ludwig Maximilians University in Munich and graduated with a master's degree . From 1998 to 1999 he was a visiting fellow at the Harvard Graduate School for Arts and Sciences (GSAS), followed by a double-degree program at the Harvard Law School and at the Harvard John F. Kennedy School for Government, which he did graduated with a degree in International Taxation and a Master of Public Administration .

After working as a member of parliament, he switched to the private sector.

politics

Between 1983 and 1989 Ott worked in the Junge Union (JU) and the CSU . From 1984 to 1989 he was local chairman of JU Baierbrunn and deputy district chairman. In 1989, Ott switched to the FDP , where he became deputy state chairman of the Young Liberal Action Saxony in 1990 and in the same year moved into the Saxon state parliament over fourth place on the FDP state list. There was one of only four MPs from West Germany and a member of the Committee on Federal and European Affairs and the Committee on Culture and the Media. In 1996 he resigned from the FDP and rejoined the CSU. In 2018 he resigned from the CSU. For the local election in Bavaria on March 15, 2020, he ran as candidate for mayor of the ÜWG (non-partisan voter group) in Baierbrunn and was elected in the runoff election on March 29, 2020 with 61.2% of the votes.

Web links

literature

Individual evidence

  1. Holzapfel (Ed.): People's Handbook. Pp. 84, 93.