Jennifer de Temmerman

Jennifer de Temmerman (born 16 February 1977) is a French politician who has been a member of the French National Assembly since the 2017 elections, where she represents the 15th constituency of the Nord.[1]

Jennifer de Temmerman
Member of the National Assembly
for Nord's 15th constituency
Assumed office
21 June 2017
Preceded byJean-Pierre Allossery
Personal details
Born (1977-02-16) 16 February 1977
Valenciennes, France
NationalityFrench
Political partyLa République En Marche(2017–2020)
Ecology Democracy Solidarity (2020 onwards)
Alma materCharles de Gaulle University – Lille III

Early life and education

Born 16 February 1977 in Valenciennes, de Temmerman grew up in a former "coron" of Anzin, before moving to Aulnoy-lez-Valenciennes.

De Temmerman was first apprenticed in bookstores in parallel with her university studies in Classics at the Charles de Gaulle University – Lille III. After obtaining her CAPES, she taught in classical letters for twelve years.

Member of the National Assembly

On 18 June 2017, de Temmerman was elected in the 15th constituency of the Nord by obtaining 60.76% of votes in the second round against the FN's candidate.[2]

In parliament, de Temmerman serves on the Committee on Sustainable Development.[3]

In addition to her committee assignments, de Temmerman has been a member of the French delegation to the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe since 2017. In this capacity, she serves on the Committee on Social Affairs, Health and Sustainable Development; the Sub-Committee on Public Health and Sustainable Development; and the Sub-Committee on the European Social Charter.[4] She is also the Assembly's rapporteur on the implementation of the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).[5]

In November 2019, de Temmerman left the LREM group to join the non-subscribers, evoking the "culmination of a process". She said she had questioned "on the meaning of [his] belonging to La République En Marche since the departure of Nicolas Hulot from the government", and had "a click" while speaking to the Assembly, without having premeditated, against an amendment, tabled by surprise, reducing by 15 million euros the budget of state medical aid.[6] In May 2020, she was one of the 17 initial members of the new Ecology Democracy Solidarity group in the National Assembly.

Political positions

In April 2018, de Temmerman joined other co-signatories around Sébastien Nadot in officially filing a request for a commission of inquiry into the legality of French weapons sales to the Saudi-led coalition fighting in Yemen, days before an official visit of Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman to Paris.[7]

In September 2018, following the appointment of François de Rugy to the government, de Temmerman supported the candidacy of Barbara Pompili as president of the National Assembly.[8]

In 2019, de Temmerman joined an international group of parliamentarians in a joint call for a body to strengthen the democratic representation of the world's citizens in global affairs and the UN's decision-making.[9]

In July 2019, de Temmerman decided not to align with her parliamentary group's majority and became one of 52 LREM members who abstained from a vote on the French ratification of the European Union’s Comprehensive Economic and Trade Agreement (CETA) with Canada.[10]

In November 2019, de Temmerman denounced the government's new immigration plan and declared in the National Assembly: "Are we going this morning, I tell you, to complete humanism? ". She co-signed a platform with ten other LREM deputies to oppose the government's measures on immigration concerning health and especially state medical aid (AME), pleading not to give in to urgency and ease ».[11]

gollark: I'm interested, and do have a decent amount of available time.
gollark: I just want rectangles. Mediocre-resolution, flat, no-cutout rectangles! They're cheaper, even, and yet everything has the stupid notchy design now.
gollark: Phones are mostly getting worse for my preferences, even: weird non-rectangle screens, no headphone jacks, bigger harder to hold screens, even less durability and repairability, battery-sucking fancier displays and more RAM, and an Android more Google-dependent and locked down every version.
gollark: Ah.
gollark: It seems that improvement in phone technology has been slow lately.

See also

References

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