Ute Eiling-Hütig

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Ute Eiling-Hütig (January 2017)

Ute Eiling-Hütig (born November 7, 1967 in Dorsten ; née Eiling ) is a German politician ( CSU ).

Career

After graduating from high school in 1987 at Maria Veen in Reken, Ute Eiling began studying ancient history, classical archeology and medieval history at the University of Münster , which she completed in 1994 with a Magistra Artium . In 1991/92 she acquired an additional qualification for humanities and social sciences. Then she worked as a research assistant. In 2000 she submitted her doctoral thesis “Philadelpheia. Studies on the Economic and Social History of a Village in Roman Egypt (1st – 3rd Century AD) ”.

From 2000 to 2002 she worked as a conference manager in the area of ​​controlling and finance and accounting at the Management Forum Starnberg. From 2002 she worked at the chair for criminal law, information law and legal informatics at the University of Munich , where she headed the library for criminal law of the legal seminar from 2003 to 2008. From 2008 to 2013 she was the personal assistant to the state parliament member Ursula Männle (CSU) and heads their citizens' office.

She is a member of the board of the CSU district association of Upper Bavaria and the district association of Upper Bavaria of the Women's Union . In her place of residence Feldafing , she is the deputy chairwoman of the CSU local association and spokeswoman for the CSU parliamentary group in the local council. In 2008 she ran for the office of mayor and was defeated by the incumbent Bernhard Sontheim (citizens' group) with 43.3% of the votes.

In the run-up to the state elections in 2013 , she decided in November 2012 to succeed Männles as a direct candidate in the Starnberg district against six competitors. On September 15, 2013, she secured her entry into the state parliament through a direct mandate.

She is a member of the Board of Trustees of the Academy for Political Education Tutzing and of the Broadcasting Council of Bavarian Broadcasting . Eiling-Hütig is also a member of the Committee for Education and Culture, a member of the Committee for Health and Care and a member of the Committee for Science and Art.

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