Serge Blisko

Serge Blisko (born 6 January 1950) is a French politician and a member of the National Assembly of France.[1] He was reelected as the member of the seventh legislature (spanning from 2007 to 2012) for the tenth Parisian constituency.[1] He is a socialist, a doctor, and a member of the municipal government for the 13th arrondissement of Paris.

Serge Blisko
Serge Blisko in 2006
Mayor of the 13th arrondissement of Paris
In office
2001–2007
Preceded byJacques Toubon
Succeeded byJérôme Coumet
Member of the National Assembly for Paris
In office
1997–2012
Personal details
Born (1950-01-06) 6 January 1950
Nancy, France
NationalityFrench
Political partySocialist Party
ProfessionPhysician

He was appointed President of the French government agency MIVILUDES from August 2012 to October 2018.

List of Mandates held

  • 05/11/1983 - 01/04/1986 : MP
  • 17/03/1986 - 22/03/1992 : Member of the Regional council of the Île-de-France.
  • 01/01/1993 - 18/06/1995 : Member of the general council of Paris.
  • 01/01/1993 - 18/06/1995 : Member of the council of Paris.
  • 19/06/1995 - 18/03/2001 : Member of the general council of Paris.
  • 19/06/1995 - 18/03/2001 : Member of the council of Paris.
  • 01/06/1997 - 18/06/2002 : MP
  • 19/03/2001 - 16/03/2008 : Member of the council of Paris; Member of the municipal council of the thirteenth borough of Paris, of which he was the mayor until 12/07/2007 (replaced by Jérôme Coumet)
  • 18/06/2002 - 17/06/2007 : MP
gollark: I don't think you can just point at that as a final answer. What is that graph even showing growth in? Why is competition not creating an incentive to get rid of useless administrators? *Is* there even much competition?
gollark: I think the point is more that it's a system which mostly works well and has produced lots of nice things.
gollark: At some point you'll have to make tradeoffs, because going for "maximize lives saved right now at all costs" is a really terrible strategy.
gollark: Strategies which minimize COVID deaths in the short run wouldn't be very good if they totally collapsed the economy after a while. Especially since this is likely to stick around for a while.
gollark: The economy *does matter*, though, even in a "lives saved" sense. As someone on the interweb put it:> Damage to productivity eventually results in damage to people, since we use part of our productivity to preserve life.

References

  1. Office of the Secretary General (2012). "Serge Blisko". Assemblee-nationale.fr (in French). National Assembly of France. Retrieved 2 March 2012.

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