Ildikó Pelczné Gáll

Ildikó Pelczné Gáll (née Gáll; born on 2 May 1962 in Szikszó) is a Hungarian politician and a former Member of the European Parliament (MEP) from Hungary. She is a member of Fidesz, part of the European People's Party.

Ildikó Pelczné Gáll
Member of the European Parliament
In office
2 June 2010  31 August 2017
ConstituencyHungary
Deputy Speaker of the National Assembly of Hungary
In office
14 July 2009  13 May 2010
PresidentLászló Sólyom
Preceded byLászló Schmitt
Succeeded byJános Áder
Member of the National Assembly
In office
16 May 2006  2 June 2010
ConstituencyBudapest
Personal details
Born
Ildikó Pelczné Gáll

(1962-05-02) 2 May 1962
Szikszó, Hungary
Political party Hungarian:
Fidesz
 EU:
European People's Party
Spouse(s)Gábor Pelcz
Children3
Alma materUniversity of Budapest

She graduated from the Faculty of Mechanical Engineering at the Technical University of Heavy Industry in Miskolc. She studied at post-graduate in economics, has acquired rights and tax consultant auditor. She worked as a university lecturer, received a doctoral degree.[1]

In 2005 she became a member of the national authorities of Fidesz. In 2006 she was elected deputy to the National Assembly. She was Vice-President of the fraction of Deputies of her group, and from July 2009 to May 2010 she served as Deputy Speaker of the Parliament.[2]

In the 2010 national elections, she gained re-election. Soon after, she became a member of the European Parliament,[3] when she replaced Pál Schmitt. Between 2014 and 2017, she was one of the Vice-Presidents of the European Parliament, representing the EPP group.

Since 2017, she is a Member of the European Court of Auditors[4].

Personal life

She is married to Gábor Pelcz. They have three children.

gollark: I expect quantum stuff would probably just be special-purpose hardware running specific tasks while coordinated by classical computers.
gollark: There is Shor's algorithm, which lets you factor primes much faster or something.
gollark: Come to think of it, we could probably put a lot of computing hardware into the solar power stuff, which presumably has a lot of power and some cooling.
gollark: The main constraints for high-performance computer stuff *now* are heat and power, or I guess sometimes networking between nodes.
gollark: Also, for random real-world background, there are only two companies making (high-performance, actually widely used) CPUs: Intel and AMD, and two making GPUs: AMD and Nvidia. Other stuff (flash storage, mainboards, RAM, whatever else) is made by many more manufacturers. Alienware and whatnot basically just buy parts from them, possibly design their own cases (and mainboards for laptops, to some extent), and add margin.

References

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