Elisabeth Dieringer-Granza

Elisabeth Dieringer-Granza (born 12 May 1974) is an Austrian politician from the Freedom Party of Austria (FPÖ). From April 2018 to April 2023 she was a member of the Carinthian State Parliament. Since 16 July 2024 she has been a member of the European Parliament.[1]

Elisabeth Dieringer-Granza
Member of the European Parliament
for Austria
Assumed office
16 July 2024
Personal details
Born (1974-05-12) May 12, 1974 (age 50)
Villach, Austria
Political partyFreedom Party of Austria
Alma materUniversity of Graz

Life

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Education and profession

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After elementary school in Maria Gail [de], Elisabeth Dieringer-Granza attended the BG/BRG Villach St. Martin, where she graduated in 1992. She then began studying to become a teacher of history and social studies as well as Italian and museum studies at the University of Graz, which she completed in 1998 with a master's degree with a thesis on the Widmann family in the context of the inner-Austrian-Venetian relations and the socio-economic changes in the 17th century .[2]

From 2005 she worked as a teacher at the elementary school in Villach-Lind and until 2013 at the Federal High School (BRG) in Spittal an der Drau. From 2013 to 2017 she was Vice President of the Carinthian State School Board, and since 2018 she has been teaching again at the Porciagymnasium in Spittal.[2]

Political career

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Elisabeth Dieringer-Granza has been the deputy state party leader of the FPÖ Carinthia since June 2016. She is the state chairwoman of the Freedom Women's Initiative (IFF) Carinthia and was the club chairwoman of the FPÖ Villach municipal council club until April 2018, where she has continued to be a member of the municipal council since then. In the course of the formation of the First Kurz government after the 2017 National Council elections, she negotiated on the FPÖ side in the education specialist group.[3]

On 12 April 2018, she was sworn in as a member of the Carinthian State Parliament in the constitutive session of the 32nd legislative period, where she is a member of the Committee for Citizen Participation, Direct Democracy and Petitions, the Committee for Women, Generations and Integration, the Committee for Health, Care and Social Affairs and the Committee for Culture, Sport and Europe.[2]

In January 2019, she was elected as the top candidate of the Carinthian FPÖ for the 2019 European elections but was not elected. At the end of November 2021, it was announced that she attended a session in the Carinthian state parliament despite testing positive for the COVID-19 virus. She allegedly accidentally deleted text messages with the result of the COVID-19 test.[4] She was not on any list for the 2023 state elections,  after the state elections she left the state parliament.[5][6] She was nominated by the Carinthian FPÖ as Carinthia's top candidate for the 2024 European elections in Austria,[7]  and was ranked 6th on the federal list. .[8]

References

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  1. ^
  2. ^ a b c Archived (Date missing) at ktn.gv.at (Error: unknown archive URL). Abgerufen am 29. Juni 2018. Cite error: The named reference "lt" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page).
  3. ^ Addendum: Archived (Date missing) at addendum.org (Error: unknown archive URL). Artikel vom 9. November 2017, abgerufen am 20. April 2018.
  4. ^ Eva Maria Scharf (2021-11-30). "Sms mit Testergebnis gelöscht: FPÖ-Abgeordnete hat ihre Verantwortung mit dem Finger weggewischt" (in German). Retrieved 2021-12-01.
  5. ^ Eva Maria Scharf (2022-09-27). "FPÖ Villach verhinderte Kandidatur von Dieringer-Granza". Kleine Zeitung. Retrieved 2022-09-29.
  6. ^ Wolfgang Fercher (2022-09-27). "Landtagsliste der Kärntner FPÖ als Männerangelegenheit". Kleine Zeitung. Retrieved 2022-09-29.
  7. ^ "FPÖ nominiert Dieringer-Granza für EU-Wahl". ORF.at. 2023-12-13. Retrieved 2023-12-14.
  8. ^ Tanja Janschitz (2024-03-19). "Kärntnerin auf 6. Listenplatz: FPÖ präsentierte alle EU-Kandidaten". 5min.at. Retrieved 2024-03-20.
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See also

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