Ulrike Fischer (politician)

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Ulrike Fischer (born November 2, 1972 in Vienna ) is an Austrian politician for the Greens . Since 2015 she is deputy mayor in St. Andrä-Wördern , since October 23, 2019 she is Member of the National Council .

Life

Ulrike Fischer grew up in Altenberg and, after finishing elementary school in St. Andrä-Wölker, attended the secondary school in Tulln , where she graduated in 1992 . She then began a degree in law at the University of Vienna , which she completed as a Magistra . She has been working as a lawyer since 2003, including at the Association for Consumer Information (VKI). Fischer is the mother of three children.

politics

Since 2002 she has been a member of the municipal council in St. Andrä-Wierter, where she became vice mayor after the municipal elections in 2015 . Since 2013 she has been a member of the regional board of the Greens in Lower Austria, and she is also the district spokeswoman for the Greens in the Tulln district .

In the National Council election in 2019 , she ran for the Greens behind top candidate Elisabeth Götze as second in the list in the Lower Austria electoral district . On October 23, 2019 she was at the beginning of the XXVII. Legislative period as a member of the Austrian National Council . As part of the coalition negotiations for the formation of a government in 2019 , she negotiated in the main group State, Society and Transparency. In the Green Parliamentary Club , she became the area spokesperson for consumer protection, petitions and citizens' initiatives.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. a b c d Ulrike Fischer on the website of the Austrian Parliament
  2. a b meineabektiven.at: Ulrike Fischer . Retrieved October 25, 2019.
  3. a b c The Greens STAW - Ulrike Fischer. In: gruene.at. Retrieved October 25, 2019 .
  4. a b Ulrike Fischer - Back to the Greens. In: zurueckzudengruenen.at. October 22, 2019, accessed October 25, 2019 .
  5. National Council election 2019: Lower Austria state election proposals. In: bmi.gv.at. Retrieved October 25, 2019 .
  6. ↑ The names of more than 100 turquoise-green negotiators have been determined. In: DerStandard.at . November 15, 2019, accessed November 16, 2019 .
  7. ^ Government negotiations ÖVP-Greens. In: Upper Austrian news . Retrieved November 16, 2019 .
  8. Greens introduce their area spokespersons. In: The press . January 17, 2020, accessed January 17, 2020 .