Barbara Kappel

Barbara Kappel (born 16 February 1965 in Reith im Alpbachtal) is an Austrian politician. From 2010 to 2014 she was a member of the FPÖ in the Vienna State Parliament and City Council. She then moved, initially as a non-attached member, to the European Parliament, where she was a member of the Europe of Nations and Freedom group until she left in June 2019.[1]

Barbara Kappel

Member of the European Parliament
Assumed office
1 July 2014
ConstituencyAustria
Personal details
Born (1965-02-16) 16 February 1965
Innsbruck, Tyrol, Austria
Political party Austrian
Freedom Party of Austria
 EU
Europe of Nations and Freedom

Life

Barbara Kappel has a doctorate in economics after studying economics and social sciences in Innsbruck and Vienna. From 2000 to 2006 Kappel worked as office manager for Thomas Prinzhorn and also in a number of agencies that are closely related to the Federation of Industrialists. From 2006 to 2015, Kappel was the managing partner of the consulting company Austrian Technologies. In October 2015, she left the company.[2]

In 2010, Kappel was part of an FPÖ campaign in which she was presented by Heinz-Christian Strache as Minister of Economy and Finance in the shadow cabinet.[3] March 2010 she was part of the FPÖ list Pro Mittelstand in the Chamber of Commerce elections. After the state and local council elections in Vienna in 2010, where she was placed 6th on the liberal list, she moved into the state parliament. In 2016 and in the course of the formation of the government in 2017, Kappel was mentioned again in the shadow cabinet by ex-FPÖ chief Heinz-Christian Strache as a possible minister of economy.[4]

The weekly newspaper Die Zeit (Austrian edition) reported in autumn 2011 that Kappel had promoted water in Eastern Europe, the distribution system of which brought the newspaper close to a so-called pyramid game; Kappel, on the other hand, emphasized that he had only worked on a voluntary basis and not operationally for the company in the start-up and product launch phase.[5]

MEPs to the EU Parliament

According to a ranking by the non-governmental organization VoteWatch Europe from 2019, in which the most influential EU parliamentarians were determined, Kappel was one of the second most influential EU MPs in Austria. Overall, it ranked 79th out of 751 in the ranking.[6]

In the European Parliament, Kappel was a member of the following committees and delegations:

  • Committee on Industry, Research and Energy
  • Economic and Monetary Affairs Committee
  • Special Committee on Financial Crime, Tax Evasion and Tax Avoidance (TAX3)
  • Delegation for relations with the countries of Southeast Asia and the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN)
  • Delegation for relations with the United States.

She was also a deputy member of the following committees and delegations:

  • Committee on Budgetary Control
  • Committee on Budgets
  • Delegation for relations with the Arabian Peninsula

After the European elections in Austria in 2019, she left the European Parliament.

Allegation of trading political posts

In April 2020, text messaging conversations from 2018 and 2019[7][8] were published, from which it emerges that the then leader Harald Vilimsky and party leader Heinz-Christian Strache doubted Barbara Kappel's loyalty and she in the EU election will no longer be on a promising list place in May 2019.

In order to avoid a scandal, Kappel should voluntarily and without publicity waive her candidacy publicly and, in return, be quiescent with posts in government-related companies.

Her colleague Johannes Hübner was later to make the "personal decision" to withdraw from parliament after he called Hans Kelsen, the father of the Austrian constitution, "Kohn".[9] In the 1930s, National Socialists disparaged Jewish lawyers with this term.

Kappel is said to have requested three positions on the supervisory boards of OMV, Verbund and ÖBAG as well as, in the medium term, the position as vice president of the Austrian National Bank. Strache instead offered her a management post in the ÖBB area, which Kappel declined.

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.