Waltraud Deeg

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Waltraud Deeg (born July 24, 1972 in Bolzano ) is an Italian politician of the South Tyrolean People's Party and a lawyer with her own law firm in Bruneck with a focus on family law .

Life

The daughter of the politician Waltraud Gebert Deeg attended the Goethe elementary school from 1978 to 1983 and the Josef von Aufschnaiter middle school from 1983 to 1986 , both in Bozen. During her high school visit death put her mother in 1988, making them the age of 15 years for the orphans was a dramatic experience. In 1991 she joined the Humanist School Walther von der Vogelweide in Bolzano maximum number of points and began a medical degree at the University Innsbruck without completing this.

From 1992 to 1998 Deeg completed the "Integrated Diploma Course in Law " offered jointly by the Universities of Innsbruck and Padua , which she completed with a diploma thesis on the action for rescission written in Italian . During her studies, which also included a stay at the University of Graz , she was active in the Malteser Hospital Services with a focus on handicapped and elderly work in Innsbruck. In 1998 Deeg entered the South Tyrolean school service and in 1999 married Wilfried Taschler, with whom she had a daughter born in 2001 and who runs a farm in Niederdorf .

From 1999 to 2001 Deeg completed a legal internship in a law firm in Bruneck and at the same time attended the land registry course in Bolzano. In the 2002/03 school year she acquired the qualification to teach law , economics and finance at the secondary school; from 2005 she taught with a permanent teaching position at the Business School in Bruneck. In 2006 Deeg successfully passed her bar exam and two years later opened a law firm in Bruneck. She attended a master's course in family law in Verona in 2008/09 and completed her training as a mediator in 2010 .

Deeg started her political career in 2010 as a municipality and city councilor in Bruneck for the areas of senior citizens, the environment, subsidized housing and equal opportunities; she resigned from the office of city councilor in 2012 as a result of her candidacy for the South Tyrolean state parliament and at the same time the regional council of Trentino-South Tyrol . In the state elections in 2013 she won a seat with 12,228 preferential votes. As a result, she was elected to the state government and entrusted in the Kompatscher I cabinet with the family and administration department. In the 2018 state elections , she was able to win another mandate with 16,760 preferential votes. After her re-election to the state government, Deeg took over the departments of social affairs, housing, family and senior citizens in the Kompatscher II cabinet and has also been the first deputy governor since 19 August 2020. In addition, she took on tasks in the regional government as Vice President and Assessor .

Functions within the South Tyrolean People's Party

  • Chairwoman of the Community Social Committee in Bruneck
  • Deputy Chairwoman of the District Social Committee Bruneck
  • Member of the women's social committee in Bruneck
  • Deputy chairwoman of the SVP in the Stegen local committee

voluntary work

  • Former member of the Malteser Hospital Service , Innsbruck and Graz section
  • Founding member and board member of the Pustertal Adult Education Center
  • Member of the district committee of the Catholic Association of Working People in Pustertal
  • Lawyer for "Women help women" and family counseling

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Diploma thesis by Waltraud Deeg (University of Innsbruck, 1998)
  2. ^ Christoph Franceschini : The paper farmer. Salto.bz , November 8, 2019, accessed November 9, 2019 .
  3. 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 ; accessed on October 31, 2013 .
  4. The national councils and their competences. Südtirol Online (stol.it), January 16, 2014, archived from the original on January 18, 2014 ; accessed on January 16, 2014 .
  5. ↑ 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 .